Former UK Deputy Prime Minister who now serves as Facebookโs vice president of global affairs, Nick Clegg, has defended the two-year suspension of former President Donald Trump from the social media platform.
โFree speech, free expression is not a free-for-all, itโs not a recipe for anarchy. Weโve always had rules, quite rightly as Facebook that you can, in a sense, kind of say what you like on Facebook but you canโt do that if that inflicts harm on others,โ Clegg told BBC News on Saturday.
Clegg suggested that Trumpโs posts to the social media platform on Jan. 6 as the U.S. Capitol was breached by protesters and rioters inflicted โharmโ on others.
โItโs a pretty longstanding principle it goes right back to the mid-19th Century this idea that youโre free to do things, but not if that inflicts harm on others and that is a rule that we applyโdoesnโt matter whether you are the Pope, the President of the United States, whether an ordinary userโyou cannot use Facebook if you want to use Facebook in a way which leads to real world imminent harm, and we think itโs crystal clear in this case that is exactly what was happening on Jan. 6 in Washington D.C,โ he explained.
Trump has contested Facebookโs classification of โharmโ after Zuckerberg said on Jan. 7 that Facebook removed one of Trumpโs Jan. 6 videos because, according to the CEO, the president decided โto use his platform to condone rather than condemn the actions of his supporters at the Capitol building.โ
In the video, Trump called on the protesters to โgo home peacefully,โ while saying that the Nov. 3 election was fraught with voter fraud. The president also said that โwe love you,โ โyouโre very special,โ and that โI know your pain. I know youโre hurt.โ