Thursday, November 28, 2024

conspiracy resource

Conspiracy News & Views from all angles, up-to-the-minute and uncensored

2020 Election

Twitter reverses activity ban on Indiana attorney general Trump tweet that implied unproven election fraud

Twitter has reversed course on an activity ban that it placed on a tweet from Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita implying that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump.

Twitter users can now reply, retweet, and like Rokita’s tweet.

On Monday, Twitter banned all activity on the tweet, which contained a Valentine’s Day meme of a cartoon portrait of Donald Trump with the text “You stole my heart like you stole the 2020 election.” Rokita posted it on his personal Twitter account.

The social media company placed a banner at the bottom of the tweet that said activity was banned “due to a risk of violence.” That banner is no longer there.

Todd Rokita tweet

This is the image Indiana Attorney General Toddy Rokita posted on Twitter, with a “Happy Valentine’s Day!” message.

Rokita issued a statement Monday after the ban saying that the meme was “tongue in cheek,” but added that “several left-leaning states” conducted elections in violation of the U.S. Constitution. Rokita did not identify which states, nor did he explain how he believes they violated the Constitution.

“We’ll never know the full extent to which these states’ actions impacted the 2020 Presidential election,” Rokita said at the time.

It is worth noting that Trump challenged results in traditionally Republican-voting states such as Georgia and Arizona. He also challenged them in major swing states such as Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — both of which voted Republican in the 2016 presidential elections.

He also chided Twitter for flagging his tweet, referring to “Big Tech’s frequent censorship of speech.”

Trump has claimed he won the 2020 election despite offering no proof of widespread voter fraud. Courts in key swing states repeatedly rejected arguments made by Trump’s legal team.

Rokita in December urged the Supreme Court to hear a lawsuit Texas filed claiming that four states had unconstitutional election practices, claims that court ultimately rejected.

*** This article has been archived for your research. The original version from South Bend Tribune can be found here ***