Facebook stops Republican ad accounts before Joe’s Senate runoff

On Nov. 17, 2020, Facebook CEO Zuckerberg testified via videoconference before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing for allegedly suppressing and interfering in the 2020 U.S. election through message censorship.

Facebook suspended a Republican fundraising committee’s advertising account in the state just as the Senate re-run election in Joe was about to take place. Facebook’s move was seen as an attempt to interfere with the race in Joe. The move follows complaints against the company’s founder, Mark Zuckerberg, over his alleged interference in the 2020 election campaign.

On Friday (Jan. 1), the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) tweeted that Facebook had shut down the advertising account of the Georgia Battlefield Fund, a joint fundraising committee formed by the NRSC to support two Republican U.S. senators running for re-election in Joe. The joint fundraising committee. With only four days until the Senate runoff in Joe, “this behavior is unacceptable.

The tweet also calls on the American public to help the Republican Party fight back by going to the relevant website.

A screenshot on Facebook’s website shows that the administration claims the accounts that were shut down violated Facebook’s ban on “using deceptive or misleading means to promote products, services, programs or solicitations for advertising.

However, following the NRSC’s protest, Facebook issued a statement explaining to the Washington reviewers that the account was disabled as a result of an ‘automated error’ in the system and that the two accounts that were restricted are now back to normal.

Facebook is one of the major public online social platforms in the United States, and its management would be breaking the law if it deliberately used the platform to interfere in various U.S. election campaigns.

About two months ago, Zuckerberg and his wife donated up to hundreds of millions of dollars to leftist groups that support the Democratic Party. In response, the Wisconsin League of Voters (WVA) has filed a complaint against the Zuckerbergs.

The Amistad Project, an initiative of the Thomas More Society, a group of conservative American lawyers, released an explosive report in mid-December last year exposing 10 nonprofit organizations funded by five foundations as shady money agencies. And the group released documents showing that Zuckerberg contributed $500 million to left-wing nonprofits, and that these radical organizations engaged in illegal activities to cause chaos and influence the outcome of the 2020 U.S. election. The report also suggests that Facebook may have influenced the U.S. election by selling the personal information of its users.

Joe State’s January 5 Senate re-run election will feature incumbent Republican Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler against Democratic candidates Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. The two Senate seats were ultimately contested. The two Senate seats will determine whether the Republican Party can continue to control the Senate.