A sketchy new report released Tuesday by the House Judiciary Committee’s Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government tries to paint an ominous picture of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
Some quick background: In 2017, the Department of Homeland Security officially designated election infrastructure as falling within CISA’s purview. The agency has since been key in garnering insight and offering guidance to private and public entities on how to stop the spread of misinformation and disinformation online.
The issue of online disinformation came to a head during the 2016 presidential election, and it remains a problem in the lead-up to the 2024 elections. Of course, many Republicans these days rely on propaganda rooted in falsehoods to advance their political goals, so they have portrayed federal agencies’ war against disinformation as a war on conservatives.
That’s how we get to Tuesday’s interim staff report, which accuses CISA of “unconstitutional behavior” and refers to the agency as “the nerve center of the federal government’s domestic surveillance and censorship operations on social media.”
That word — “censorship” — appears dozens of times in the 36-page report, which accuses CISA of “censorship by proxy.” In other words, the committee is claiming that the agency is engaged in censorship by merely sharing information (such as tips received from local election officials) with social media companies, because the companies could feel pressured to adopt CISA’s suggestions. But the “Twitter Files” conspiracy theory (also pushed by the “weaponization” committee) ironically disproved this by showing that companies can receive information from the government and still independently reach conclusions about content moderation.
However, the committee’s chair, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, isn’t letting the facts drown out some useful propaganda. He and his conservative allies have been building up to this report for several months now. ProPublica reported in March that Jordan had begun issuing “sweeping information requests” to universities and a think tank, in which he accused the institutions of participating in the Biden administration’s “censorship regime.”
On June 6, The Washington Post reported on Kate Starbird, the co-founder of an anti-disinformation think tank at the University of Washington who has faced online harassment over her work. Some of the documents Jordan obtained relating to Starbird appear to form the basis of the committee report’s dubious “censorship” claims.








