“The document is clearly newsworthy, providing Republican Party and conservative doctrine insight into what the Trump campaign perceives to be Vance’s liabilities and weaknesses,” he wrote. “Those perceptions provide clues about what a campaign of remarkably little substance might actually think.”
Klippenstein’s account was subsequently suspended.
Other users pointed out that they could not send the link to Klippenstein’s post via X DMs or share the link in a post.
In a screenshot shared by one user, X issued the following explanation for not allowing the post to be shared: “We can’t complete this request because this link has been identified by X or our partners as being potentially harmful.”
Many users, including X owner Elon Musk, criticized Klippenstein for doxxing Vance by publishing the dossier.
“This is one of the most egregious, evil doxxing actions we’ve ever seen,” Musk wrote on Thursday. “Presidential candidates are not speculatively in danger – there have already been two attempts on Donald Trump’s life. Moreover, the doxxing included detailed information on the addresses of their children.”
In an exclusive interview with Breaking Point’s Krystal Ball on Friday, Klippenstein defended his publication of the unredacted dossier.
“The reason we did this was intentional,” he said. “The whole point of the story is that we are tired of adhering to norms that exist to deprive people of information. It felt dishonest to decide, ‘Oh, but we’re gonna do this for a public figure running for vice president,’ especially when the media has done segments in front of his house.”
“At a certain point, I ask: what is the point?” he continued. “This is a public figure with a security detail facing less risk. I understand I’m probably in the minority here, but that’s my philosophical position on freedom of information.”
Klippenstein also claimed all the information was publicly available.