Following then-President Donald Trump’s incitement of the deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, Facebook suspended him from its platform indefinitely -- a decision that was upheld by the company’s Oversight Board and later announced as a two-year suspension. But Facebook has left open loopholes that allow Trump to push his messaging on the platform, including letting him run ads for his joint fundraising committee and allowing his page to continue to earn interactions.
Media Matters latest findings about Trump’s presence on Facebook include:
- Facebook removed more than 580 ads that Trump’s joint fundraising committee has run since October 4, which had already earned 10.2 million impressions. However, Facebook has also enabled the committee to run another 350 ads since December 1, earning at least 2 million impressions.
- Based on Trump’s previous pattern of using Facebook, we estimate that his suspension kept approximately 1,400 posts with misinformation or extreme rhetoric off the platform in the year since the insurrection -- including roughly 350 posts that would likely have contained election misinformation.
- Since May 5, when Facebook’s Oversight Board upheld Trump’s suspension, his 13 posts from January 6 which remain on the platform have earned 350,000 more interactions.