Devin Nunes sues Twitter over mean tweets from parody account of his mom
California Representative Devin Nunes announced that he will file a $250,000 lawsuit against Twitter, alleging that the company engages in “explicit censorship” and has allowed critics to defame him on the platform. Simultaneously complaining that Twitter">Twitter silences its critics while asking Twitter to silence his critics is a curious legal strategy, but really it’s par for the course for one of President Trump’s most theatrically partisan and unabashed allies.
Nunes Twitter-for-censoring">first threatened legal action against Twitter last year after claiming that the company was “shadow banning” conservatives, effectively burying their accounts. Twitter Twitter.com/official/en_us/topics/company/2018/Setting-the-record-straight-on-shadow-banning.html">clarified that the network does not bury any user content based on ideology and that a since-resolved algorithmic issue failed to populate auto suggestions for some Twitter users, including both Democratic and Republican lawmakers.
Now, the Republican representative appears to be following through on last year’s threat.
“Nunes has no adequate remedy at law,” the lawsuit claims. “Without Court intervention and an injunction, Nunes will suffer actual and irreparable injury to his property interests and personal rights by the mere fact that Defendants’ defamatory tweets can be retweeted and republished forever by third-parties.”
The lawsuit’s defendants, first reported by Twitter-seeks-250m-for-anti-conservative-shadow-bans-smears">Fox News, include not only Twitter itself and a Nunes critic named Liz Mair but also @DevinCow and @DevinNunesMom, two accounts parodying the lawmaker’s cow and his mother, respectively.
Among its complaints, the lawsuit objects to a colorful array of claims made by the since-suspended @DevinNunesMom account:
– “Nunes is ‘not ALL about deceiving people. He’s also about betraying his country and colluding with Russians'”
– “I don’t know about Baby Hitler, but would sure-as-shit abort baby Devin”
– “Alpha Omega wines taste like treason”
and
– “falsely [suggesting] that Nunes might be willing to give the President a ‘blowjob.'”
Twitter-tweet">The herd agrees🐄 https://t.co/AhSmn4QtqC
Devin Nunes’ cow (@DevinCow) Twitter.com/DevinCow/status/1100263616131944449?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 26, 2019
The lawsuit also accuses “Devin Nunes’ Cow” of spreading false claims to its 1,204 Twitter followers. Those claims include stating that “He’s udder-ly worthless and its [sic] pasture time to move him to prison” and “Devin is whey over his head in crime.”
Dairy puns notwithstanding, the allegedly “egregiously false, defamatory, insulting, abusive, hateful, scandalous and vile statements” that prompted Nunes to name the parody accounts are fairly tame compared to much of the hatespeech endured by Twitter users who don’t also happen to be members of Congress. Further, Nunes would need to prove that the three accounts in question acted with “actual malice,” a higher legal standard reserved for proving defamation against a public figure — and one intended to safeguard free speech.
When contacted by TechCrunch, Twitter declined to comment on the lawsuit.