Twitter Defeats Trump’s Deplatforming Lawsuit–Trump v. Twitter
In July 2021, Trump sued Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube for terminating/suspending his accounts. At the time, I made a 6-step prediction for how the lawsuits would go:
Step 3 in the Twitter case, the transfer from Florida to California, occurred in October 2021. Now, to no one’s surprise, Judge Donato dismissed the Twitter case (Step 4 of my prediction). After Trump’s futile attempt to amend the complaint, it will be onto Step 5.
The opinion itself is plain-spoken, precise, and devastating:
First Amendment
“Twitter is a private company.” (Cites to Williby v. Zuckerberg and Halleck). Trump argues that Twitter is nonetheless a state actor. The court replies: “This is not an easy claim to make, for good reasons.” Though the applicable legal standards are malleable, “the facts alleged in the amended complaint are not nearly enough for plaintiffs to proceed on a state action theory.”
With respect to legislative jawboning:
the comments of a handful of elected officials are a far cry from a “rule of decision for which the State is responsible.” Legislators are perfectly free to express opinions without being deemed the official voice of “the State.” Government in our republic of elected representatives would be impossible otherwise. It is also not plausible to conclude that Twitter or any other listener could discern a clear state rule in such remarks, or even determine what a legislator’s “preferred views” might be….There is no way to allege with any degree of plausibility when, if ever, the comments voiced by a handful of members of Congress might become a law, or what changes such a law might impose on social media companies like Twitter….Much of what plaintiffs challenge fits within the normal boundaries of a congressional investigation, as opposed to threats of punitive state action.
Plus, the complaint alleges that Twitter closed the various named plaintiffs’ accounts for different reasons, and “these explanations indicate that Twitter acted in response to factors specific to each account, and not pursuant to a state rule of decision.” Also, some of the statements cited in the complaint weren’t from actual government officials, relate only to Facebook, or weren’t actually threatening.
The court distinguishes the Twitter jawboning from precedent cases of actual government censorship because:
In each of the cases, a concrete and specific government action, or threatened action, was identified. Here, plaintiffs offer only ambiguous and open-ended statements to the effect that “we may legislate” something unfavorable to Twitter or the social media sector. This is a world away from: (1) a state commission sending local police officers for drop-in visits and threatening prosecution by the state attorney general (Bantam Books); (2) a city mayor and police superintendent threatening law enforcement action to crack down on sit-in demonstrations (Lombard); (3) a deputy county attorney threatening prosecution against a private company under a specific law (Carlin); and (4) a federal administrative commission threatening the suspension of licenses or formal rulemaking if its specified elements for an anti-drug program were not followed voluntarily (Mathis).
[An aside: Team Trump made the “odd assertion” that Iqbal/Twombly heightened pleading standards apply only in antitrust conspiracy cases. The court curtly responds that they’ve been applied in a wide variety of contexts, and “a scant minute of online research makes this abundantly clear.”]
Section 230
“The government cannot plausibly be said to have compelled Twitter’s action through Section 230, which in any event imposed no affirmative obligations on Twitter to act in any particular way.” The court adds that the plaintiffs lack standing to challenge Section 230.
Florida Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices
This claim is inapplicable because Twitter’s TOS said California law governs. The court also points out that Twitter’s “TOS gave Twitter contractual permission to act as it saw fit with respect to any account or content for any or no reason, which makes its ostensible motives irrelevant for a deceptive practices claim. ”
Florida Social Media Censorship Law
Only one of the plaintiffs was a Florida resident with a Twitter account when the law nominally took effect, plus the law has been enjoined in “a well-reasoned decision.”
Implications
This ruling is consistent with the dozen of other rulings dismissing lawsuits over account terminations and content removals. There was never any doubt that Trump or his team could not outperform the dozens of plaintiffs who have preceded him. Anyone thinking this lawsuit had any chance of success was delusional.
The court gives the plaintiffs a chance to amend their complaint, and I’m sure they will. But they’ve already taken their best shot, and none of the court’s rationales are unexpected or unanticipated. So the amended complaint will undoubtedly fail too. Then it’s onto the Ninth Circuit.
The question everyone wants to know: if Musk completes the Twitter acquisition, will Trump get his Twitter account back? Trump has said he doesn’t want it, which we all know is another lie; Trump would come back in a heartbeat if the price is right. Either way, if Musk owns Twitter, it will be his legal prerogative to change Twitter’s policies, and I will defend his legal freedom to exercise his editorial discretion as he sees fit.
However, if Musk allows Trump back on, the remaining Twitter employees will revolt. If they haven’t already left/been fired by that point, there will be an exodus en masse if Trump comes back. Musk cannot recruit equally talented replacements, so Musk will switch out Twitter’s employees from the A team to the B team–a process that will further drive Twitter into the ground. As the joke goes, how do you turn a billionaire into a millionaire? The old answer: buy an airline. The new answer: buy a social media company (see also MySpace and Tumblr).
Case citation: Trump v. Twitter, Inc., 2022 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 82496 (N.D. Cal. May 6, 2022)
Selected Jawboning Posts
- Section 230 Survives Yet Another Constitutional Challenge–Huber v. Biden
- Another Anti-Vaxxer Jawboning Lawsuit Fails–ICAN v. YouTube
- The First Amendment Protects Twitter’s Fact-Checking and Account Suspension Decisions–O’Handley v. Padilla
- One More Time: Facebook Isn’t a State Actor–Atkinson v. Facebook
- Government Jawboning Doesn’t Turn Internet Services into State Actors–Doe v. Google
- Facebook Defeats Lawsuit By Publishers of Vaccine (Mis?)information–Children’s Health Defense v. Facebook
- Another Must-Carry Lawsuit Against YouTube Fails–Daniels v Alphabet
- Congressional Jawboning of Internet Services Isn’t Actionable–AAPS v. Schiff
- Facebook Isn’t a Constructive Public Trust–Cameron Atkinson v. Facebook
- Section 230 Ends Demonetized YouTuber’s Lawsuit–Lewis v. Google
Selected Posts About State Action Claims
- Account Suspension Lawsuit Against Twitter Survives Motion to Dismiss–Berenson v. Twitter
- Another Failed Lawsuit Over Facebook’s Content Removals–Brock v. Zuckerberg
- Section 230 Survives Yet Another Constitutional Challenge–Huber v. Biden
- Another Court Says Facebook Isn’t a State Actor–McWaters v. Houston
- Another Anti-Vaxxer Jawboning Lawsuit Fails–ICAN v. YouTube
- The First Amendment Protects Twitter’s Fact-Checking and Account Suspension Decisions–O’Handley v. Padilla
- One More Time: Facebook Isn’t a State Actor–Atkinson v. Facebook
- Two More Courts Tell Litigants That Social Media Services Aren’t State Actors
- Government Jawboning Doesn’t Turn Internet Services into State Actors–Doe v. Google
- Anti-Zionist Loses Lawsuit Over Social Media Account Suspensions–Martillo v. Facebook
- Court Nopes Another Lawsuit Over Facebook Suspensions–Orders v. Facebook
- Facebook Defeats Lawsuit By Publishers of Vaccine (Mis?)information–Children’s Health Defense v. Facebook
- Court Rejects Lawsuit Alleging YouTube Engaged in Racially Biased Content Moderation–Newman v. Google
- Yet Another Court Says Facebook Isn’t a State Actor–Brock v. Zuckerberg
- YouTube (Again) Defeats Lawsuit Over Content Removal–Lewis v. Google
- When It Came to @RealDonaldTrump, Twitter Couldn’t Please Everyone–Rutenberg v. Twitter
- Another Must-Carry Lawsuit Against YouTube Fails–Daniels v Alphabet
- Newspaper Isn’t State Actor–Plotkin v. Astorian
- An Account Suspension Case Fails Again–Perez v. LinkedIn
- Are Social Media Services “State Actors” or “Common Carriers”?
- Google and Twitter Defeat Lawsuit Over Account Suspensions/Terminations–DeLima v. Google
- More Plaintiffs (and Lawyers) Need To Be Reminded That YouTube Isn’t a State Actor–Divino v. Google
- Facebook Isn’t a Constructive Public Trust–Cameron Atkinson v. Facebook
- Google and YouTube Aren’t “Censoring” Breitbart Comments–Belknap v. Alphabet
- LinkedIn Isn’t a State Actor–Perez v. LinkedIn
- Section 230 Preempts Another Facebook Account Termination Case–Zimmerman v. Facebook
- Section 230 Ends Demonetized YouTuber’s Lawsuit–Lewis v. Google
- Court Rejects Another Lawsuit Alleging that Internet Companies Suppress Conservative Views–Freedom Watch v. Google
- Another Suspended Twitter User Loses in Court–Wilson v. Twitter
- First Voters Reject Tulsi Gabbard, Then a Judge Does–Gabbard v. Google
- YouTube Isn’t a State Actor (DUH)–PragerU v. Google
- Facebook Still Isn’t Obligated to Publish Russian Troll Content–FAN v. Facebook
- Vimeo Defeats Lawsuit for Terminating Account That Posted Conversion Therapy Videos–Domen v. Vimeo
- Russia Fucked With American Democracy, But It Can’t Fuck With Section 230–Federal Agency of News v. Facebook
- Private Publishers Aren’t State Actors–Manhattan Community Access v. Halleck
- Your Periodic Reminder That Facebook Isn’t a State Actor–Williby v. Zuckerberg
- Section 230 Protects Facebook’s Account and Content Restriction Decisions–Ebeid v. Facebook
- Court Tosses Antitrust Claims That Internet Giants Are Biased Against Conservatives–Freedom Watch v. Google
- Twitter Isn’t a Shopping Mall for First Amendment Purposes (Duh)–Johnson v. Twitter
- YouTube Isn’t a Company Town (Duh)–Prager University v. Google
- Facebook Defeats Lawsuit By User Suspended Over ‘Bowling Green Massacre’–Shulman v. Facebook
- Yelp, Twitter and Facebook Aren’t State Actors–Quigley v. Yelp
- Facebook Not Liable for Account Termination–Young v. Facebook
- Online Game Network Isn’t Company Town–Estavillo v. Sony
- Third Circuit Says Google Isn’t State Actor–Jayne v. Google Founders
- Ask.com Not Liable for Search Results or Indexing Decisions–Murawski v. Pataki
- Search Engines Defeat “Must-Carry” Lawsuit–Langdon v. Google
- KinderStart Lawsuit Dismissed (With Leave to Amend)
- ICANN Not a State Actor
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