Exclusive: Trump administration asks court to dismiss
Big Tech's challenge to social media executive order
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[August 13, 2020] By
Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration has filed a motion asking a court to dismiss a lawsuit
against the president's executive order targeting social media
companies, calling it a "profound misunderstanding," according to a copy
of the motion seen by Reuters.
The lawsuit was brought in June by the Center for Democracy and
Technology (CDT), a Washington-based tech group funded by Facebook Inc,
Alphabet Inc's Google and Twitter Inc. It marked the first major legal
test of President Donald Trump's directive.
Trump issued an executive order in May against social media companies in
an attempt to regulate platforms where he has been criticized, just days
after Twitter took the rare step of fact-checking one of his tweets
about mail-in voting. Trump threatened to scrap or weaken a law known as
Section 230, which protects internet companies from litigation over
content posted by users.
The lawsuit by CDT argued Trump's social media executive order violates
the First Amendment rights of social media companies, will chill future
online speech and reduce the ability of Americans to speak freely
online.
The administration argues that the executive order only directs
government agencies, and not private companies, to act.
"The EO challenged here imposes no obligations on any private party,"
said the motion filed by the Department of Justice in the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia, which was seen by Reuters.
"It directs executive officials to take steps that could lead various
agencies to examine ... allegations that large social media online
platforms have displayed political bias in moderating content," the
motion said.
The lawsuit reflects long-simmering tensions between the Trump
administration and social media companies that have become key tools in
Trump's political arsenal.
Avery Gardiner, CDT's general counsel, called Trump's executive order
"unconstitutional." CDT's lawsuit argues that the White House ran afoul
of the First Amendment, which prohibits government officials from
retaliating against an individual or entity for engaging in protected
speech.
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Facebook, Google and
Twitter logos are seen in this combination photo from Reuters files.
REUTERS/File Photos
"Instead of actually trying to address the merits of the issues, and to engage
in litigation that will show the severe constitutional deformities of the
executive order, it is resorting to legal maneuvering," Gardiner said on
Wednesday, referring to the Trump administration's move.
The CDT has negotiated a briefing schedule with the DOJ. CDT will be filing its
response by the end of August and the government is likely to respond by Sept.
21, she said.
White House spokesman Judd Deere said the administration moved to dismiss the
case because "it is not a valid legal argument."
"The left-wing lobbying organization's brief seems to suggest it doesn't
understand how administrative action works or possibly that it doesn't
understand the nature of the judicial system," he told Reuters on Wednesday.
The Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request seeking
comment.
Twitter called the executive order a "reactionary and politicized approach to a
landmark law." It declined comment on the CDT lawsuit. Google and Facebook did
not respond to requests for comment.
Trump's order seeks to channel complaints about political bias to the Federal
Trade Commission. At a recent Senate hearing, the agency's chairman, Joseph
Simons, said the FTC has not taken any action to enforce the order.
The U.S. Commerce Department has petitioned the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) seeking new transparency rules in how social media companies
moderate content after Trump's executive order directed the action. Earlier this
month FCC Chairman Ajit Pai agreed to open the petition to public comment for 45
days.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington, Additional reporting by David
Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Ken Li and Matthew Lewis)
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