Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg has denied having any type of deal with US President Donald Trump, after the social media company refused to toe Twitter's line by fact checking and censoring the president's social media posts.
Zuckerberg's
comments come in response to mounting concern over his relationship with the
president, which has remained cordial despite worries about the president’s use
of social media.
In 2019 Trump hosted
Zuckerberg for a secret dinner at the White House. The dinner came just a week
after Zuckerberg made a speech confirming that Facebook would not fact-check
political ads.
Facebook’s refusal
to remove Trump’s response to protests in Minneapolis against racist police
violence where he said “when the looting starts, the shooting starts” has cost
the company.
There has been
employee walkouts and advertiser boycotts because of the company's stance.
“I’ve heard this
speculation, too, so let me be clear: There’s no deal of any kind,” said
Zuckerberg on Monday while reacting to rumours of him partnering with Trump.
“Actually, the whole idea of a deal is pretty ridiculous.” he added
Roger McNamee, a
venture capitalist who was an early investor in Facebook, told The New York
Times last month that he believed the two billionaires had a deal or agreement.
McNamee said the arrangement was “probably implied rather than explicit” and
“highly utilitarian,” but mutually beneficent all the same.
“It’s basically
about getting [Facebook] free rein and protection from regulation,” said
McNamee. “Trump needs Facebook’s thumb on the scale to win this election.”
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