Former President Donald Trump’s lawsuits against Twitter, Google and Facebook for kicking him off their platforms are sure losers, legally speaking. The First Amendment protects people against state action, and tech companies aren’t state actors.
Yet Trump’s main argument to the contrary — that congressional Democrats coerced the platforms into cutting him off by threatening to repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act — deserves close scrutiny. Wittingly or not, it sheds light on how Trump tried to push around the platforms during his presidency, and arguably succeeded until the Capitol attack of Jan. 6.
I’ll focus on the Twitter case, because Twitter was Trump’s preferred communication outlet. (Disclosure: I have advised Facebook on ethical-governance and free-expression issues since 2018.)
The trouble with relying on the First Amendment is that Twitter isn’t the government. It’s a private company. Its decision to allow or prohibit speech is not subject to any restrictions imposed by the First Amendment. Twitter’s decisions are protected by First Amendment rights that extend to corporations just as they do to you and me.