Twitter Adds Fact-Checking Label to Trump Tweets for First Time

Twitter Inc. has started fact-checking U.S. President Donald Trump.

Following years of criticism that the social network has allowed the president to spread misinformation on its service, on Tuesday a pair of Trump’s tweets that made unsubstantiated claims about mail-in voting were appended with links reading “Get the facts about mail-in ballots.”

The labels take readers to a page with a collection of stories and reporters’ tweets about the president’s claims, as well as an item apparently authored by Twitter staff titled “What you need to know” that rebuts the president. It’s the first time the company has ever taken action on Trump’s tweets for being misleading. The action came on the same day Twitter faced intense criticism for failing to move against the president’s tweets on a different subject — a conspiracy theory about the death almost two decades ago of a former congressman’s aide.

“Trump falsely claimed that mail-in ballots would lead to ‘a Rigged Election,”’ the Twitter-authored item reads. “However, fact-checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud.”

Twitter confirmed it had added the fact-checking links to Trump’s tweets.

“These tweets contain potentially misleading information about voting processes and have been labeled to provide additional context around mail-in ballots,” the San Francisco-based company said in a statement.

Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale said the label was an effort to interfere with the president’s efforts to get his message to voters. “Partnering with the biased fake news media ‘fact checkers’ is only a smoke screen Twitter is using to try to lend their obvious political tactics some false credibility,” Parscale said in a statement.

The labels are part of a policy Twitter expanded earlier this month when it started labeling misinformation related to Covid-19. Posting misinformation is not against the company’s rules, but Twitter is adding links providing more information to tweets “where people may still be confused or misled,” it said at the time. Twitter has expanded that policy to include tweets about voting, according to a spokesperson, who declined to share if this policy included other potential topics.

Trump shared the same post about mail-in ballots on Tuesday to his Facebook page, where he has more than 29 million followers. That post is still up and doesn’t include any warning or label. Facebook Inc. didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Twitter was under fire earlier in the day to remove some of Trump’s tweets — just not the ones focused on mail-in ballots. The New York Times published a letter written by a man whose wife died in former Representative Joe Scarborough’s office, asking Twitter Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey to remove tweets Trump posted encouraging a baseless conspiracy theory that Scarborough murdered the woman, Lori Klausutis.

Twitter issued a statement apologizing for the pain Trump’s tweets caused Klausutis’s family but did not say whether the tweets would be removed. They are still visible on the president’s Twitter account, which has more than 80 million followers, and on his Facebook page.

— With assistance by Mario Parker, and Justin Sink

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