In a turn of events equally tragic and ironic, the Biden administration officially scrapped its plans for a council on disinformation amid baseless allegations of political targeting.
The fact Republicans were so successful in using disinformation to quash the Disinformation Governance Board is itself an argument for its necessity. But a Department of Homeland Security advisory committee created to assess the need for such a board seemed to disagree. According to The Washington Post, the committee wrote in a formal recommendation to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas that there’s “no need” for the disinformation board. And the committee’s co-chair, Michael Chertoff, added Monday there was “no room” for it either.
If “no room” sounds like an implausible reason not to form this board, that’s because it is. It’s far more likely — obvious, I’d say — the administration simply gave in to right-wing pressure on this front. And the country is worse off for it.
In April, the Biden administration announced it was forming the Disinformation Governance Board to combat immigration-related disinformation that’s contributing to the U.S.-Mexico border crisis, as well as disinformation foreign adversaries like Russia funnel to Americans. The agency was to be led by Russian disinformation expert Nina Jankowicz. But Republicans — members of a party that has displayed an affinity for disinformation and the Russian government in recent years — rebuffed the idea. She resigned her position in May.
As my MaddowBlog colleague Steve Benen wrote at the time, GOP Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Marco Rubio of Florida were among the many right-wingers who falsely decried the board as an Orwellian infringement on free speech.









