Marjorie Taylor Greene

United States Congress/Wikimedia (Public Domain)

Twitter temporarily suspends Marjorie Taylor Greene—and she smells a conspiracy

Greene's office says her account was locked for unspecified violations.

 

Claire Goforth

Tech

Posted on Mar 19, 2021   Updated on Mar 22, 2021, 10:27 am CDT

Drama is the oxygen that sustains freshman Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.). In the wee hours of Friday morning, Twitter delivered the QAnon-touting congresswoman a fresh tank in the form of a temporary suspension.

According to a press release from Rep. Greene’s office, around 1:00am ET she received an email notifying her that her personal account was being locked for unspecified violations of Twitter’s policies. She would be able to view tweets and send direct messages, but not tweet or like others’ tweets, per the release.

The suspension was to last 12 hours, she said. The suspension reportedly applied to her personal account; her office told the Daily Dot that her official congressional account was not affected.

Greene, whose rise to Congress was propelled by her embrace of QAnon, believes the timing of the Twitter suspension effectively silences her.

“This move eliminated any possibility for Congresswoman Greene to defend her reputation, her seat, and most importantly the votes of 230,000 Georgians in the 14th District on the Twitter platform,” she said in a release.

The congresswoman posted about the suspension on her Facebook account Friday morning.

The Twitter suspension comes a day after a group of more than 70 Democrats signed a motion to expel Greene from Congress. Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Calif.) told Forbes that the move was based on her espousing conspiracy theories about mass shootings and the 9/11 terror attacks, calling for Democratic lawmakers’ executions, and the like.

https://twitter.com/AndrewSolender/status/1372615187182804994?s=20

She claims that Twitter suspended her to help Democrats expel her.

“It appears that Twitter is assisting Democrats in their attempt to overturn the 2020 election of Congresswoman Greene and silence not only her voice, but the voice of the Georgians who sent her to Congress,” her office added in the release.

Gomez had said that, while Republicans have expressed some interested in expelling her from Congress, none as of yet have agreed to support what would be an incredibly rare move.

Weeks into her term, Greene’s fellow Republicans voted to strip her committee assignments. This came after a video resurfaced of Greene harassing Parkland school shooting survivor and gun safety advocate David Hogg in Washington, D.C.

Her office says that Twitter did not offer an explanation for the temporary suspension. This is the second time the company has locked Greene’s account.

Twitter temporarily suspended her in mid-January, alleging violations of its civic integrity policy. Greene had posted tweets calling for Americans to “mobilize” against “attacks on our liberties” and accusing Democrats, President Joe Biden, Silicon Valley, and others of looking for reasons to “implement Communist Chinese-style spying and censorship.” Her account was locked for 12 hours later that day.

Based on the time referenced in the press release, Greene’s account will be restored early this afternoon.


Read more of the Daily Dot’s tech and politics coverage

Nevada’s GOP secretary of state candidate follows QAnon, neo-Nazi accounts on Gab, Telegram
Court filing in Bored Apes lawsuit revives claims founders built NFT empire on Nazi ideology
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Say hi to the Donald for us’: Florida police briefed armed right-wing group before they went to Jan. 6 protest
Inside the Proud Boys’ ties to ghost gun sales
‘Judas’: Gab users are furious its founder handed over data to the FBI without a subpoena
EXCLUSIVE: Anti-vax dating site that let people advertise ‘mRNA FREE’ semen left all its user data exposed
Sign up to receive the Daily Dot’s Internet Insider newsletter for urgent news from the frontline of online.
Share this article
*First Published: Mar 19, 2021, 10:17 am CDT
 

Featured Local Savings

Exit mobile version