In a recent clip that has garnered significant attention on social media, Tim Walz, Kamala Harris’s recently announced running mate, told MSNBC that “misinformation” is not protected speech. The clip has sparked debate about Walz and where he believes the boundaries of free speech lie. But it’s also raising questions about what free speech would look like under a possible Harris-Walz administration.
In reality, the issue goes far beyond Walz and Harris, extending deep into the Democratic Party’s revised stance on freedom of expression. For decades Democrats were seen as the free speech party, with institutional allies like the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) going to lengths — like defending the rights of neo-Nazis to march — to prove the point. But it’s evidence that the political dynamic has flipped as Democrats now equate free speech with the Right.
That Tim Walz falsely believes the free speech guarantee doesn’t include what he considers to be ‘misinformation’ or ‘hate speech’ will bother almost no Dem supporters, since the vast majority of them want the state to be empowered to censor dissent.pic.twitter.com/z74vizL9HT
— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) August 7, 2024
As Glen Greenwald wrote in a post on X: “That Tim Walz falsely believes the free speech guarantee doesn’t include what he considers to be ‘misinformation’ or ‘hate speech’ will bother almost no Dem supporters, since the vast majority of them want the state to be empowered to censor dissent.”
Until recent years, Democrats enjoyed a virtual monopoly on information governance since their only real pipeline for information distribution, the mainstream media, sat squarely in their political camp. The media proved itself willing to play ball at almost any cost, a phenomenon that culminated in the media-wide effort to spread mostly unsubstantiated claims about Donald Trump’s ties to Russia.
For most of the past 20 years, Big Tech companies that controlled the major social media platforms were similarly aligned with the Democratic Party. The social platforms were often in lock step with the media — and, as it were, the Democratic Party — on key issues, like the effort to censor and discredit as “Russian disinformation” the Hunter Biden laptop. Major platforms including Twitter, Instagram and Facebook also indefinitely suspended President Trump after 6 January.
But the media monopoly on information distribution is over. With Zuckerberg’s “vibe shift” away from the technocratic Left and towards a patriotic, pro-Americanism, which includes calling Trump’s reaction to his attempted assassination “badass,” and Twitter, now rebranded as X, in the hands of Elon Musk, the misinformation party is over for Democrats. What remains is a blunt campaign to clamp down on content through the use of law and regulation or third-party pressure groups like the Global Alliance for Responsible Media, a media pressure group being sued by Musk for unfairly targeting X with an advertiser boycott.
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