White House complaint about RFK Jr. COVID-19 tweet cited in latest Biden defeat

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011017 Trump RFK meeting pic
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., and President-elect Trump have expressed concern that vaccines cause autism. (Photo by John Salangsang/Invision/AP) John Salangsang

White House complaint about RFK Jr. COVID-19 tweet cited in latest Biden defeat

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The White House’s attempts to censor anti-vaccine activist and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over vaccine misinformation was referenced explicitly in the sweeping limits restricting government contact between Big Tech and social media.

RFK Jr. was mentioned in the preliminary injunction filed by the judge, Trump appointee Terry Doughty, on Tuesday in response to a lawsuit by Republican attorneys general in Louisiana and Missouri. The lawsuit notes how Clarke Humphrey, the then-digital director for the White House’s COVID-19 Response Team, emailed Twitter on Jan. 23, 2021, to request the removal of a tweet by RFK Jr.

BIDEN OFFICIALS BLOCKED FROM COLLUDING WITH BIG TECH IN MAJOR CENSORSHIP: JUDGE

The email was forwarded to Rob Flaherty, former deputy assistant to the president and director of digital strategy, asking if “we can keep an eye out for tweets that fall in this same genre.”

“Federal judge orders President Biden to stop censoring his critics including me,” RFK Jr. tweeted on Tuesday. “The decision mentions me on page 17. Happy Independence Day Everyone!”

It is unclear what tweet Humphrey was referencing. RFK Jr. had tweeted several links and images critical of the Biden and Trump administration’s approach to COVID-19 vaccines in the past.

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, one of the two attorneys general filing the initial suit, said in a series of tweets that the injunction prohibits nearly all of the federal government from colluding with social media companies. This includes the Department of Justice, Department of Health and Human Services, and Department of Homeland Security.

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The DOJ is reviewing the injunction and will “evaluate its options,” a White House spokesperson said in a statement.

RFK Jr.’s press team did not respond to requests for comment from the Washington Examiner.

Read the court filing

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