WASHINGTON — The Biden administration was “not involved” with Twitter’s controversial content moderation or alleged efforts by ex-FBI attorney Jim Baker to stall new CEO Elon Musk’s transparency efforts, the White House’s chief spokesperson claimed Friday.
Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre maintained a lack of collaboration despite then-White House press secretary Jen Psaki saying last year that the administration was “flagging” alleged misinformation to Facebook, another top social media platform.
The Post asked Jean-Pierre about the matter three days after Musk fired Baker for allegedly slyly vetting the release of internal documents on decisions to suppress The Post’s October 2020 reporting on documents from first son Hunter Biden’s laptop.
“[Was] anyone in the Biden administration… in touch with Baker either regarding moderation decisions that critics call political censorship or regarding [Musk’s] transparency efforts recently?” a reporter for The Post asked Jean-Pierre at her regular press briefing.
“I can say that we were not involved,” she went on. “And as I’ve said several times this week already… we’ve had this conversation many times in this briefing room, just the past couple of days. You know, of course, it’s up to these companies to make their own decisions about the content on their platform and to ensure… their own standards and policies.”
Musk fired Baker following the conspicuous absence of communications involving the FBI from an initial batch of documents published Friday night by journalist Matt Taibbi — who was provided with the records by Musk — showing that there were early internal doubts about Twitter’s claim to censor The Post pursuant to its “hacked materials” policy.
There was no evidence the laptop was hacked. As The Post reported at the time, the computer was abandoned at a Delaware repair shop.
A recently surfaced sworn declaration by Twitter’s former head of site integrity, Yoel Roth, said that platform representatives had “weekly” meetings with the FBI ahead of the 2020 election.
“I was told in these meetings that the intelligence community expected that individuals associated with political campaigns would be subject to hacking attacks and that material obtained through those hacking attacks would likely be disseminated over social media platforms, including Twitter,” Roth said in the December 2020 declaration to the Federal Election Commission.
“I also learned in these meetings that there were rumors that a hack-and-leak operation would involve Hunter Biden.”
The Taibbi-published documents did not illuminate the FBI’s possible role in censoring The Post.