Conservative figures and pundits picked up the Monday announcement that billionaire Elon Musk has purchased a significant stake in Twitter to boost well-worn false claims about censorship of conservatives on social media and to push for Musk to use his newly bought influence to allow former President Donald Trump to return to Twitter.
After the news broke of Musk's investment, which makes him the largest shareholder of the company, Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal also announced that Musk had also been appointed to the platform's board of directors. Musk responded to the announcement by saying he was “looking forward to working with Parag and Twitter to make significant improvements to Twitter in coming months.” On Monday, Musk had floated the idea of users being able to edit tweets, and on March 24, he had said Twitter’s “algorithm needs to be open source.”
On Tuesday, Twitter responded to questions regarding the influence Musk’s board seat would confer. A spokesperson said the company is “committed to impartiality in the development and enforcement of its policies and rules” and that its “policy decisions are not determined by the Board or shareholders.”
The news of Musk's investment comes after recent pushes by Republican lawmakers to enact legislation in states like Texas and Wisconsin that would place restrictions on the content moderation policies of social media platforms like Twitter -- efforts that have largely been deemed unconstitutional. More recently, Twitter has drawn ire from conservatives after accounts belonging to Turning Point USA's Charlie Kirk and conservative satirical website The Babylon Bee were suspended for misgendering Adm. Rachel Levine.
Musk has drawn controversy for his tweets in the past, and he is currently fighting an agreement with the Securities and Exchange Commission that requires his tweets to be pre-approved after he made claims about Tesla, a publicly traded company owned by Musk, that resulted in charges of fraud. Musk recently tweeted that he believes Twitter was “failing to adhere to free speech principles” and “fundamentally undermin[ing] democracy,” although Musk himself has been accused of retaliating against those who levied criticism against his companies.
Prior to the announcement, some conservative pundits called on Musk to invest in the platform, with Pizzagate conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec calling on former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to “team up with @elonmusk” in order to “buy Twitter and take it private again.” Conspiracy theorist website Revolver News posed the hypothetical in an April 1 article headlined “Here’s What Happens if Elon Musk Buys Twitter,” which suggested Musk was “on the cusp of launching a global crusade to restore freedom of speech.”
Conservatives have used Twitter’s enforcement of its content policy -- including bans on manipulated media and election interference -- to accuse the platform of censoring right-wing voices. In actuality, Twitter remains an important platform for the dissemination of right-wing misinformation, recently acting as a sounding board for QAnon conspiracy theories, attacks on LGBTQ rights, and baseless smears about Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson. The narrative around censorship of conservatives is well trodden and often inaccurately levied against Facebook as well, despite being resoundingly debunked time and again.
Twitter accounts of Gab and GETTR — alternatives to mainstream social media platforms, which often have little to no content moderation and which remain hotbeds of misinformation and propaganda — celebrated Musk’s investment. Gab claimed on Twitter that his purchase was “validating” to its “thesis” that “more speech and not less is a good thing.”
Right-wing media and figures have used the news of Musk’s purchase to again boost false claims that Twitter is censoring conservative voices:
- On April 4, Fox News' Tucker Carlson started off his show with a monologue about censorship being “essentially the hallmark of neoliberalism.” He then provided a list of “ideas that the people in power use to justify their power and their rule over you,” which included statements he termed “ridiculous” such as “white supremacy is our biggest threat” and “Ukraine is a vitally important ally.” Carlson then accused social media platforms of censoring “all rational scrutiny of the regime's claims” and asserted they “now function like the North Korean state news agency.” He then posed the question of whether Musk’s investment was “the first move in a hostile takeover of Twitter that transforms Twitter into a platform for free speech,” surmising that it “seems that way” and saying it is a “cause for celebration.”