Republican Rep. Jim Jordan Issues Sweeping Information Requests To Universities Researching Disinformation

This post first appeared at ProPublica. ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

House Republicans have sent letters to at least three universities and a think tank requesting a broad range of documents related to what it says are the institutions’ contributions to the Biden administration’s “censorship regime.”

The letters are the latest effort by a House subcommittee set up in January to investigate how the federal government, working with social media companies, has allegedly been “weaponized” to silence conservative and right-wing voices. So far, the committee’s investigations have amplified a variety of dubious, outright false and highly misleading Republican grievances with law enforcement, many of them espoused by former President Donald Trump. Committee members have cited supposed abuses that include the FBI’s search of Mar-a-Lago, its investigations of Jan. 6 rioters and the Biden administration’s purported use of executive powers to shut down conservative viewpoints on social media.

Now, universities and their researchers are coming under the spotlight of the committee, which the Republicans have labeled the House Judiciary Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government. The letters, signed by Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, who is chair of both the House Judiciary Committee and the subcommittee, were sent in early March.

They cover an investigation into how “certain third parties, including organizations like yours, may have played a role in this censorship regime by advising on so-called ‘misinformation,’” according to a copy of one of the letters obtained by ProPublica.

The committee requested documents and information dating back to January 2015 between any “employee, contractor, or agent of your organization” and the federal government or social media organizations pertaining to the moderation of social media content. ProPublica confirmed the requests went to Stanford University, the University of Washington, Clemson University and the German Marshall Fund of the United States.

The letters have prompted a wave of alarm among those in the field that the congressional inquiry itself, no matter what it finds, will lead universities to pull back on this research just as the 2024 election gets underway. “Recent efforts definitely have a chilling effect on the community of experts across academia, civil society and government built up to understand broader online harms like harassment, foreign influence and — yes — disinformation,” Graham Brookie, who leads studies in this area at the Atlantic Council, told ProPublica.

“The ‘weaponization’ committee is being weaponized against us,” another researcher told ProPublica. Like half a dozen others interviewed for this story, this person asked not to be identified because of the ongoing congressional probe.

Democrats have called the committee a modern-day House Un-American Activities Committee, akin to the congressional committee that pursued alleged communists during the McCarthy era.

Since Rep. Jordan took over the gavel of the judiciary committee in January, he has issued more than 80 subpoenas and requests for documents. Recipients have included the CEOs of social media companies, intelligence officials who signed on to a statement about Hunter Biden’s laptop during the 2020 campaign and members of the National School Boards Association who asked the Justice Department to investigate threats of violence against school board officials. Jordan himself refused a subpoena to testify before the Democratic-led House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack, prompting that committee to refer the matter to the House Ethics Committee.

Jordan’s missives were sent a day after a committee hearing on the “Twitter files,” leaked internal communications from the company that purported to show how right-wing accounts were sidelined and silenced. In written testimony, a panelist accused a broad swath of organizations and individuals of being members of the “Censorship Industrial Complex,” including, he implied, the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, CIA, Department of Defense and universities. The witness wrote disinformation researchers, working with the government, are “creating blacklists of disfavored people and then pressuring, cajoling, and demanding that social media platforms censor, deamplify, and even ban the people on these blacklists.”

A New York University study concluded in 2021 that social media had not silenced those on the right. “The claim of anti-conservative animus” by social media companies, the study said, “is itself a form of disinformation: a falsehood with no reliable evidence to support it.”

A spokesperson for Rep. Jordan did not respond to requests for comment.

Since the 2016 elections, Stanford, UW, Clemson and others have engaged in research, sometimes in partnership with social media platforms, government officials and each other, into ways that disinformation can pose threats to democracy and how such efforts can be meaningfully countered. The role of lies and disinformation leading to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol gave increased prominence to their work.

As ProPublica has previously reported, sustained accusations by congressional Republicans and right-wing influencers that the Biden administration is stifling dissent have caused the administration to back away from its efforts countering disinformation, including canceling research contracts and sending messages inside the administration that disinformation work is too hot to handle.

Those moves followed a bungled rollout of a clumsily named “Disinformation Governance Board” to coordinate efforts to counter what the administration had called “dangerous conspiracy theories that can provide a gateway to terrorist violence.” Following criticism, the administration disbanded the board and accepted the resignation of its executive director, Nina Jankowicz.

Jordan has subpoenaed Jankowicz, too. She is scheduled to testify April 10 and said she will happily testify under oath.

“This sort of inquiry isn’t something that belongs in the United States Congress,” said Jankowicz. “But given that this method of bullying has caused other institutions to fold to Republican pressure in the past, I fear we may see the blunt force of congressional committees continue to be used in ways that are in direct opposition to the safety, security and free expression of the American people.”

Stanford did not answer a question about whether it stood by its research or make its researchers, the Stanford Internet Observatory’s Alex Stamos or Renee DiResta, available for comment. The university referred ProPublica to an online fact sheet addressing “inaccurate and misleading claims” made in the congressional testimony about Stanford’s “projects to analyze rumors and narratives on social media relating to U.S. elections and the coronavirus.” The German Marshall fund said it was working to address the request and Clemson University’s media relations department did not respond to requests for comment.

The University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public issued a statement that said “We’re incredibly proud of our work,” adding that “some of the projects CIP researchers have contributed to have become the subject of false claims and criticism that mischaracterizes our work, a tactic that peer researchers in this space are also experiencing.” The statement did not specifically address the House requests.

A university spokesperson, Victor Balta, said in an email, “The UW stands behind this important research aiming to resist strategic misinformation and strengthen our discourse. We have received a request for documents and information, and a response is in progress.”

Low Energy DeSantis

Ron DeSantis is now slowly, kinda starting to announce his presidential candidacy and criticize Donald Trump. He says, for instance, that the “underlying conduct” in the Stormy Daniels case is “just outside my wheelhouse.” And if that seems a bit underwhelming, yeah, that was kind of my impression too. He also says that a political leader should try to be “like our founding fathers” and have “character.” He notes at one point in an interview with Piers Morgan that George Washington “always put the Republic over his own personal interest.” As I think about it, in a pre-Trump world these might be fighting words. Sorta. But not in the Trump era. Not if you’re trying to take down Donald Trump.

Continue reading “Low Energy DeSantis”

North Carolina’s Lt. Governor Is A Facebook Brawler Whose Posts Railed Against Gays, Blacks, And Jews

Earlier this month, North Carolina Lieutenant Gov. Mark Robinson (R) delivered a pair of speeches that sparked speculation he might be running for governor next year. However, his remarks online are far more notable than any comments he’s made in his official capacity. 

Continue reading “North Carolina’s Lt. Governor Is A Facebook Brawler Whose Posts Railed Against Gays, Blacks, And Jews”

Judge Agrees With DOJ That Trump Likely Committed A Crime

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.

Fight Over Corcoran Testimony Continues 

We’re currently back in vintage Donald Trump era where yelling about “ILLEGAL LEAKS” has become the main line of defense against a firehose of bad news for the former president. 

Let me just break down the last several hours:

  • ABC News reported last evening, citing sources familiar with the legal filings, that U.S. Judge Beryl Howell has determined Trump may have knowingly mislead his lawyers and “intentionally concealed” information about the classified materials he had in his possession after leaving the White House.
  • Howell wrote on Friday that prosecutors in special counsel Jack Smith’s office had presented enough compelling preliminary evidence “that the former president had committed criminal violations” for attorney-client privileges that at least two of his lawyers have cited to avoid testimony could potentially be revoked. 
  • The judge ordered that Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran must now comply with a grand jury subpoena for his testimony about his communications with Trump. Howell reportedly cited six separate areas of inquiry that Corcoran must now speak to after initially asserting attorney-client privilege over the comms. 
  • The judge also ordered that Corcoran must hand over some documents like handwritten notes that may be revealing of the alleged “criminal scheme” by Trump. 
  • Per ABC: “In reaching the so-called prima facie standard to pierce Corcoran’s privilege, Howell agreed prosecutors made a sufficient showing that on its face would appear to show Trump committed crimes. The judge made it clear that prosecutors would still need to meet a higher standard of evidence in order to seek charges against Trump, and more still to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
  • Then later last night: the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals placed a temporary hold on Howell’s order and told both the Trump team and prosecutors to file new arguments within hours, giving Trump a deadline of midnight and Smith’s team a deadline of 6 a.m. Wednesday. The details of the filings remain sealed for now. 

The former guy’s team has publicly responded in Trumpian fashion, with his campaign issuing a statement that was really just a laundry list of all of Trump’s favorite lines of attack – leaks, fake news and never Trumpers. 

“Shame on Fake News ABC for broadcasting ILLEGALLY LEAKED false allegations from a Never Trump, now former chief judge, against the Trump legal team,” the campaign said, referencing the fact that Howell is an Obama appointee. 

“Prosecutors only attack lawyers when they have no case whatsoever,” the campaign added in a statement to Politico. “These leaks are happening because there is no factual or legal basis or substance to any case against President Trump.”

And, as evidenced by the Trump White House clearing out its comms department after each disastrous scandal, accused people only attack leaks when they’re running out of defense strategies.

Grand Jury Vote 

It is still unclear when the grand jury will move to indict Trump. Politico reported earlier this week that the vote may happen today, but there were additional indications yesterday that the indictment may not come down until next week. Even if charges are returned today, it could be days before Trump has to turn himself in. 

Meanwhile, Trump is reportedly looking forward to the experience, telling people close to him at his Mar-a-Lago resort that he welcomes the idea of a perp walk and a media circus. According to the New York Times, he’s most focused on ensuring he will not be seen “slinking away in shame.”

He seems to be having a nice week, too:

As he waits for a likely criminal indictment — making him the first current or former American president to face criminal charges — Mr. Trump has often appeared significantly disconnected from the severity of his potential legal woes, according to people who have spent time with him in recent days. He has been spotted zipping around his Palm Beach resort in his golf cart and on one recent evening acted as D.J. at a party with his personally curated Spotify playlists, which often include music from the Rolling Stones to “The Phantom of the Opera.”

Receipts

Text messages between Trump attorney Joe Tacopina (Trump’s new TV lawyer) and Stormy Daniels dating back to 2018 were turned over to the Manhattan DA’s office, raising questions about Tacopina’s ability to serve as Trump’s lawyer in the hush payments case. CNN has the goods.

‘If I Run, I’ll Be Running Against Biden’

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and gratingly long-anticipated 2024 candidate is finally, sort of, going after Trump. DeSantis sat down for an interview with the friendly Piers Morgan yesterday and discussed the potential of a presidential bid, among other things. The interview won’t air entirely until Thursday, but Morgan previewed the contours of the discussion in this New York Post column.  

If these are the best quotes from the discussion, the Trump-jabs from DeSantis were pretty tame. While he refused to say whether he’s actually running, he did say that if he tosses his hat in the primaries, he will beat Trump:

“If I were to run,” he said confidently, “I’m running against Biden. Like we [him and Trump] are competing for the Republican, potentially, I get that, but ultimately you know the guy I’m gonna focus on is Biden because I think he’s failed the country. I think the country wants a change. I think they want a fresh start and a new direction and so we’ll be very vocal about that.”

McConnell Update

The senator was recently hospitalized for five days after a fall left him with unclear injuries. The Washington Post reported late last night that McConnell has suffered a concussion and a broken rib and remains in an inpatient rehabilitation center. He reportedly phoned three Senate Republicans on Tuesday to discuss his interest in getting back to work, but he didn’t mention a recovery timeline. 

Maybe He Watched The Netflix Doc

All as he urges his followers to “take our nation back”:

Meeting The Moment

Before Roe was overturned last summer and before the draft of the majority opinion leaked, my colleague Kate Riga reported on a phenomenon that experts at the time believed would be the next front in the war on abortion in the U.S. post-Roe – policing abortion access across state lines. The six-week bounty hunter style ban had just passed in Texas and was upheld by the Supreme Court. In the piece, Kate tracked red state efforts to mimic and build upon the extreme Texas law. At the time, a Missouri Republican had just introduced an amendment that would allow people to sue anyone aiding or abetting an abortion, even if it took place in a different state. 

Flash forward to the present. Lawmakers in the Minnesota state house just passed a bill that will shield pregnant people, doctors or nurses who travel to Minnesota for abortion care from legal repercussions in their home state. The bill, dubbed the “Reproductive Freedom Defense Act,” still needs to make its way through the state Senate, but will likely be signed into law by Democratic Gov. Tim Walz. From the Minnesota Reformer:

Under the bill, reproductive health records cannot be released to prosecutors or investigators in other states without the patient’s consent — even if subpoenaed by a court in another state.

The bill prohibits Minnesota judges from issuing warrants and law enforcement from making arrests of people charged with crimes in other state’s for accessing reproductive health care in Minnesota. The governor may not extradite a person charged with a crime involving reproductive health care, either.

Desperate For Cash

In the least surprising development on earth, Trump is raising money off of his own impending indictment. 

It’s Confusing Out There For The Threat-Doers

There are so many Trump investigations floating around that even those hellbent on stoking violence and issuing threats around Trump’s potential indictment are getting confused about the target. Just as CBS News was reporting that there’s been a “significant increase” in threats from domestic extremists posted online in recent days, Bloomberg News reported that someone called in a bomb threat to a Lower Manhattan courthouse.

The New York County Supreme Court building was cleared and searched and the threat was deemed unfounded, but it took place just as a judge was about to start a hearing in a separate case related to the $250 million lawsuit brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James against Trump.

Warmongering

As some Republicans urge peace and calm in the wake of Trump’s calls for protests over his impending indictment, others are pouring gasoline on the matter. Two Trump allies used war-like imagery to describe the aftermath of a possible Trump arrest. 

  • “They can do what they want,” Trump lawyer Tacopina told Kimberly Guilfoyle on Monday. “At that point, this is an all-out war.”
  • “It’s going to blow up our country, and this is a bunch of B.S.,” Sen. Lindsey Graham said on “Fox & Friends.” 

Wisconsin Supreme Court Race

Janet Protasiewicz pounced on her conservative opponent Daniel Kelly’s Big Lie ties on Tuesday during the only debate that will be held in this closely-watched race. Tuesday was also the first day of early voting in Wisconsin. 

Vanilla For Prez

The Atlantic conducted a series of focus group interviews to ask Republican voters about their opinion of the former veep who is hardly hiding his presidential ambitions. The assessments were less than stellar: Nobody Likes Pence

Move Over Kim K

Do you like Morning Memo? Let us know!

Correction: The headline of this post has been corrected to clarify that a judge agreed with DOJ’s argument that it has evidence Trump used his attorney in furtherance of a crime.

Big Picture

It now seems clear that a New York City indictment of Donald Trump won’t happen today and may not even happen tomorrow, based on some tenuous reporting over the last 24 hours. But there’s a good chance that almost all the current commentary will end up mattering much, much less than the simple fact that almost five months after the 2022 midterm the GOP remains thoroughly chained to Donald Trump.

Dominion Tells Judge That Fox Released Kraken Of Defamation On It

It was the wildest propagators of theories that President Trump lost the 2020 election not to Biden, but to theft, that Dominion has singled out in its attempt to notch an early win in its defamation suit against Fox.

Continue reading “Dominion Tells Judge That Fox Released Kraken Of Defamation On It”

McCarthy Downplays Trump’s Hush Money Payments: It Was ‘Personal Money,’ ‘Seven Years Ago’

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) tried to downplay the Manhattan DA’s case against former president Donald Trump, regarding hush money payments to a porn star he was allegedly involved with, on Tuesday as simply an investigation into what the former president did with his “personal money.”

Continue reading “McCarthy Downplays Trump’s Hush Money Payments: It Was ‘Personal Money,’ ‘Seven Years Ago’”

Manhattan DA Responds To House GOP Letter: ‘We Will Not Be Intimidated’

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office spoke out for the first time since the House GOP sent a conspiracy theory-laced letter to the DA demanding that he testify before Congress about the expected indictment of former President Donald Trump in the Stormy Daniels hush money case.

Continue reading “Manhattan DA Responds To House GOP Letter: ‘We Will Not Be Intimidated’”

Looking Back Twenty Years On

As we consider the 20-year anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, I wanted to acquaint you with or remind you of some of the intellectual and emotional climate of the moment. This is separate from the reminders of the sheer deception that made the war possible. But it’s quite important. I’m linking two pieces I wrote at outside publications around that time — one for The New Yorker and another for The Washington Monthly. I covered much of the same ground at TPM, in these virtual pages. But because of the nature of this venue, the ideas and observations are more spread over various posts, often keyed to the immediate developments of the day, many short and momentary.

Continue reading “Looking Back Twenty Years On”

Intel Sources Warn Of ‘Significant Increase’ In Domestic Extremist Threats Ahead Of Expected Trump Indictment

Intelligence sources said there’s been a “significant increase” in online threats and violent rhetoric from domestic extremists since former President Donald Trump claimed he will be indicted in the Stormy Daniels hush money case, according to CBS News.

Continue reading “Intel Sources Warn Of ‘Significant Increase’ In Domestic Extremist Threats Ahead Of Expected Trump Indictment”