Facebook issued a report regarding right-wing cries of bias on the platform. Notably, the report includes no actual data supporting those claims. Nor does the Wall Street Journal op-ed penned by former Sen. Jon Kyl.
That’s because such data doesn’t exist.
Media Matters’ Natalie Martinez has done multiple studies of hundreds of Facebook pages, with data going back to 2018. At every point, left-wing and right-wing pages had similar interaction rates. No data shows conservative censorship.
From January 2018 through July 2018:
Martinez specifically found that right-wing meme pages actually received the most engagements (reactions, comments, and shares) of all political-related content. These pages regularly posted false and derogatory content about immigrants and people of color.
Martinez and Madelyn Webb also looked deeper at abortion-related content on Facebook, finding that it is dominated by right-wing sources:
Through all of this, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has taken a blasé approach to addressing problems of misinformation, choosing repeatedly to give in to right-wing pressure campaigns. That’s one reason Zuckerberg was Media Matters’ 2017 Misinformer Of The Year. Facebook even appointed lobbyist, Trump ally, and erstwhile Senator Jon Kyl to run the bias report.
As Media Matters President Angelo Carusone said, “Facebook’s impulse to appease right-wing cries of bias, despite all evidence to the contrary, is yet again putting Facebook in a position where it'll be amplifying lies and enabling extremists, white supremacists, and Proud Boys at the expense of American democracy and with great risk to our safety.”
In the Trump era, we all know exactly where the road of appeasing bad-faith right-wing pressure campaigns goes, and it’s nowhere good.
This post has been updated for clarity.