Meta on Friday said it was rolling back some restrictions to former President Donald J. Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts so people on its services could hear from those running for the presidency “on the same basis.”
Under the restrictions on Mr. Trump’s accounts, he could have been suspended from Meta’s services — which also include Threads and WhatsApp — if he had posted content that sought to delegitimize this November’s election, among other things. But Meta said it was now relaxing those restrictions, reducing the potential for a suspension if Mr. Trump violated the company’s terms of service.
The move further returns Mr. Trump’s social media accounts to what they had been before the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. At the time, Mr. Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts were indefinitely suspended on the grounds that his posts ran the risk of inciting more violence. Last year, Meta reinstated Mr. Trump’s accounts, but with the restrictions.
As of Friday, those penalties are no longer applicable.
“We believe that the American people should be able to hear from the nominees for President on the same basis,” Nick Clegg, Meta’s president of global affairs, said in a statement. He said the penalties placed on Mr. Trump’s accounts had been “a response to extreme and extraordinary circumstances” after Jan. 6, and were no longer needed.
Presidential nominees still need to abide by Meta’s terms of service, however, the company said.
At the Republican National Convention next week, Mr. Trump is expected to accept the party’s nomination for President. The Democratic National Convention is in August, though calls from prominent Democrats for President Biden to step aside as nominee have complicated that process. Mr. Biden has maintained he has no plans to drop out.
Axios previously reported on Meta’s policy update.
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