Meta is set to restructure its global policy team, with Sir Nick Clegg—the liberal former Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom—stepping down. Joel Kaplan, currently Clegg’s deputy, is expected to take over. Kaplan, who served as Deputy Chief of Staff in the George W. Bush administration, has staked out a public stance in opposition to aggressively limiting political speech on Meta’s Facebook and Instagram social media platforms, arguing that such measures disproportionately affect conservative voices.
After the 2016 presidential election, Kaplan worked to create an internal Facebook whitelist of Republican and conservative-aligned accounts and pages on the website that would allegedly protect them from censorship. Despite the whitelist, Facebook has continued to censor factual posts, pages, and accounts belonging to conservative activists and lawmakers.
The National Pulse reported last year that Facebook was directed by the Meta Platforms’ Oversight Board to reinstate a post that parodied Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her running mate Tim Walz, comparing them to the characters in the film Dumb and Dumber. Additionally, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Commissioner Brendan Carr criticized Meta’s censorship policies last October, arguing they suppressed factually accurate content critical of the Biden-Harris movement.
Last August, Meta CEO and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg admitted that the Democrat White House pressured his company to censor American citizens.
MENDING FENCES WITH TRUMP?
Kaplan’s promotion comes as Meta’s political strategy gears up for a Republican-led government. The former Bush White House official has extensive ties to lawmakers on Capitol Hill and will likely oversee Zuckerberg’s efforts to mend fences with President-elect Donald J. Trump. Meanwhile, Republican lobbyist and fundraiser Brian Baker was hired by the Meta CEO in September to aid the political public relations campaign as well.
“I’m grateful for everything you’ve done for Meta and the world these past seven years,” Zuckerberg said in a message to Clegg, saying the Briton has shaped the company’s approach to AI and the metaverse. Zuckerberg also voiced confidence in Kaplan’s leadership abilities, citing his longstanding experience in policy matters.