With the advent of social media, many politicians chose to set up official Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram accounts to communicate with their constituents. These accounts are used for official purposes, and many politicians have kept their own, separate personal accounts, which they use for their lives outside of public life.
President Donald Trump’s use of his previously private Twitter account as president brings a major new wrinkle into whether a politician’s private Twitter account may be a public forum. President Trump, unlike many politicians, maintains only one Twitter account that he uses for both private and official interactions with the American people. Like other private citizens, when President Trump sees tweets directed at him that he finds offensive or inaccurate, he sometimes takes steps to block those users. Because President Trump is a public official, the act of blocking an individual user on his private account may have constitutional implications that are not a consideration with a private citizen.
In Knight First Amendment Inst. at Columbia Univ. v. Trump, 302 F. Supp. 3d 541 (S.D.N.Y. May 23, 2018), a group of seven citizens, represented by the Knight First Amendment Institute, sued President Trump. Their complaint alleged that when President Trump blocked them on Twitter, he engaged in viewpoint discrimination in a public forum, action that would violate the freedom of speech guarantee of the First Amendment. President Trump argued that because this was his private account, created in 2009, it was not subject to First Amendment claims at all.
The District Court, in a case of first impression, found Trump’s argument unpersuasive, as both parties stipulated to the fact that President Trump regularly conducts official business through his private Twitter account. The court ruled that President Trump’s Twitter feed constitutes a designated public forum. Judge Naomi Buchwald likened his Twitter feed to a public park in which many voices could congregate to express their views and ideas. President Trump’s Twitter feed (where a user can interact with the president’s tweets by responding, retweeting, and more) was differentiated from President Trump’s original tweets, which would be considered government speech and not subject to a First Amendment claim. In blocking individual users, President Trump engaged in unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination, and the court ordered the president to unblock the users who filed suit.