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Summary List PlacementFormer president Donald Trump appealed directly to Facebook's Oversight Board to rejoin the platform, Channel 4 News reported.
The Facebook Oversight Board, a team of 20 experts from around the world, is reviewing the tech company's decision to permanently suspend Trump's account. Helle Thorning-Schmidt, the former prime minister of Denmark and a member of the Oversight Board, told Channel 4 News of Trump's appeal, according to the outlet's communication director Hayley Barlow.
Thorning-Schmidt added the Oversight Board has received thousands of public comments on the issue.
"We can confirm that a user statement has been received in the case before the Oversight Board concerning President Trump's Facebook and Instagram accounts," an Oversight Board spokesperson said in a statement to Insider. "We will have no further comment concerning that statement until the Board has issued its decision."
Facebook suspended Trump's account following the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol building. Trump had posted a video to Facebook during the insurrection that appeared sympathetic to rioters and disseminated false claims of election fraud.
The Facebook Oversight board, which launched last year and has ruled on five cases so far, announced on January 21 that it will review the company's decision to suspend Trump. The board has 90 days total to decide whether Trump can remain on the platform. Decisions made by the Board cannot be overturned.
The former president had been critical of Facebook's decision to launch an oversight board. The New Yorker reported that Trump called CEO Mark Zuckerberg himself to protest the addition of Pamela Karlan, a Stanford Law professor who testified at his 2019 impeachment. Zuckerberg listened to his complaints but did not change the board's composition, per The New Yorker.
The Oversight Board overturned Facebook's decisions in four out of five prior rulings. The Board voted to reinstate posts, like that of a breast cancer symptom and on the treatment of Uyghur Muslims in China, Facebook removed for violating its terms of service.
A spokesperson for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.
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See Also:
- What you need to know about Section 230, the controversial internet law Trump hated and Biden might reform
- Unsealed court document claims Facebook 'knew for years' that a metric was inflated and ignored an employee warning to avoid a revenue hit
- Google kicked Donald Trump's official campaign app from the Play Store because it no longer worked, but the iOS version is still live