The Senate’s top Internet cop wants to haul Facebook employees before Congress after a tech site reported that the social-media giant allegedly squashes conservative views.
Like many other Republicans, Sen. John Thune, R-South Dakota, was taken aback by a Gizmodo report on Monday in which some former Facebook contract employees claimed to have manipulated the site’s Trending Topics feed to suppress conservative news items and boost liberal ones.
Unlike many other Republicans, Thune can do something about it.
Thune is chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee — which, among other jurisdictions, oversees technology, communications and Internet issues.
“If true, these allegations compromise Facebook’s ‘open culture’ and mission ‘to make the world more open and connected,’” Thune wrote Tuesday in a sharply worded letter to Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, demanding that employees responsible for Trending Topics brief the Senate committee by May 24.
This story says that former Facebook workers suppressed Conservative news – including stories about me:https://t.co/PePRNnqX5m
— Scott Walker (@ScottWalker) May 10, 2016
The Republican National Committee flat-out charged in a statement that the Gizmodo report proves that Facebook is “censoring” conservative viewpoints.
“It is beyond disturbing to learn that this power is being used to silence view points and stories that don’t fit someone else’s agenda,” the RNC statement said.
To which Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada said, in essence, LOL.
Adam Jentleson, Reid’s spokesman, in a response to Thune’s move, noted the Senate’s inaction on several critical issues, including President Barack Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to succeed the late Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court.









