Trump is angry that Twitter won't remove a crudely edited 'Moscow Mitch' meme poking fun at McConnell

President Donald Trump
  • In a tweet Tuesday, President Donald Trump pressured Twitter to remove a meme poking fun at Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

  • The meme, shared by a user with fewer than 200 followers, shows McConnell's face photoshopped onto a Soviet Union soldier with the caption "Moscow Mitch."

  • Trump said lawmakers should repeal Section 230, a law that shields social networks from being held liable for users' posts as long as they remove illegal content.

  • A Twitter spokesperson said in a statement to Business Insider that the meme would not be removed because it doesn't violate any of Twitter's rules.

  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

President Donald Trump raged against Twitter on Tuesday over a meme that labels Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell as "Moscow Mitch," questioning why the platform wouldn't remove the image.

The meme shows McConnell's face crudely edited onto the body of a Soviet Union soldier and was shared by an account that had just over 100 followers.

"Why does Twitter leave phony pictures like this up, but take down Republican/Conservative pictures and statements that are true?" Trump tweeted.

Trump has for months been nursing a grudge against Twitter, which recently applied warning labels to several of his tweets that violated its policies against promoting violence and spreading misinformation about voting. Trump reacted to those warning labels in May with an executive order listing grievances against social-media companies and asking the Federal Communications Commission to crack down on them.

While Trump's executive order was vague, it asked the FCC to reinterpret Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a law that shields websites from being held responsible for the content that users post as long as they make a good-faith effort to remove illegal content.

Republicans have homed in on Section 230 as a way to hit back at tech companies that they say unfairly target conservatives with policies against misinformation. The evidence does not support that theory — data shows that conservative pages consistently generate the most engagement across social-media sites.

Trump tagged Republican Sen. Josh Hawley in his tweet Tuesday. Hawley introduced legislation in June that would strip tech companies of their legal immunity under Section 230 unless they can prove they're "politically neutral." He more recently introduced a bill that would make tech companies more vulnerable to lawsuits from users who believe online rules are being enforced unfairly.

If Section 230 protections were repealed entirely, experts say most social-media companies would not be able to afford the legal costs associated with maintaining an open forum.

A Twitter spokesperson said in a statement to Business Insider that the meme would not be removed because it doesn't violate any of Twitter's rules. Twitter's policy on manipulated media only prohibits content that's shared with the intent to deceive people; obvious satire is generally allowed on the platform.

Trump isn't the first world leader to try to quash memes criticizing his party. In 2018, China banned all online mentions of Winnie the Pooh after memes comparing President Xi Jinping to the cartoon bear were widely shared. In Russia, people who share a meme of President Vladimir Putin in drag makeup could face jail time.

The "Moscow Mitch" meme in question was created by Peter Heney, a graphic designer in Ontario who regularly posts political memes on Twitter. Though he's a Canadian citizen, Heney hopes Trump loses reelection, he told Business Insider.

"I can't tell you how pleased I was today to see the President of the United States retweet one of my favorite creations," Heney said in an email to Business Insider. "So happy to do my part to help get rid of America's Trump nightmare on November 3."

Read the original article on Business Insider