House Judiciary may hold Alphabet in contempt over subpoena

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan may hold Alphabet, the parent company of Google and YouTube, in contempt for failing to comply with a subpoena seeking to uncover any coordination between the tech giant and the Biden administration to censor free speech.

Alphabet has handed over more than 4,000 pages of material to the committee, but has redacted and potentially omitted important information, according to a letter Jordan (R-Ohio) sent Monday to Alphabet attorney Daniel Donovan.

“These redactions do not appear to be based on any applicable privilege — because Alphabet has asserted none — and the Committee requires this material to be produced without redactions,” Jordan wrote.

The GOP chairman told Donovan he expects the tech company to return the requested documents to the Judiciary Committee no later than May 22 — or face “one or more enforcement mechanisms.”

That could include a civil lawsuit, withholding of federal funds or forced congressional testimony from CEO Sundar Pichai and other company executives, but a source familiar with the probe told The Post the committee is leaning toward holding Alphabet in contempt.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan may hold Alphabet and its CEO Sundar Pichai (left) in contempt.
AP

“The release of the Twitter Files has shown just how extensively the Executive Branch communicated and coordinated with technology companies regarding content moderation,” Jordan said of their effort.

“We are skeptical that Alphabet’s interactions with the federal government where pressure was applied were any less concerning than those of Twitter.”

Jordan, 59, said Alphabet must share communications with the committee showing interaction between the company and other social media platforms, as well as with its partners like the Global Disinformation Index and subsidiaries such as Mandiant and Jigsaw.


Jim Jordan
Jordan told Alphabet’s attorney he expects the tech company to return requested documents to the Judiciary Committee no later than May 22.
AP

Those communications must include emails and text messages as well as data from Slack, Microsoft Teams, Jira, Signal, WhatsApp, Messenger and Telegram messages, he added.

Alphabet’s attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Pichai last testified before Congress in October 2020, when he, then-Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg faced questions about having censored The Post’s reporting on Hunter Biden’s overseas business dealings.

The letter comes two months after “Twitter files” journalists Matt Taibbi and Michael Shellenberger testified before a Judiciary subcommittee about the federal government’s collusion with tech companies.


Sundar Pichai
Pichai last testified before Congress in October 2020, when he and other tech CEOs faced questions about censoring The Post’s reporting.
REUTERS

Google headquarters
“Twitter files” journalists Matt Taibbi and Michael Shellenberger testified before a Judiciary subcommittee in March about the federal government’s collusion with tech companies.
Getty Images

“Effectively, news media became an arm of a state-sponsored thought-policing system,” Taibbi said at a March hearing of the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government.

“We learned Twitter, Facebook, Google, and other companies developed a formal system for taking in moderation ‘requests’ from every corner of government: the FBI, DHS, HHS, DOD, the Global Engagement Center at State, even the CIA.”

Twitter baselessly claimed The Post had published “hacked materials” in its bombshell reports from October 2020 based on emails from Hunter Biden’s abandoned laptop, censoring its account and blocking users from sharing links to one of its stories.


Sunday Pichai
The House Judiciary Committee may also push for congressional testimony from Pichai and other company executives.
Getty Images for Greentech Festival

Jim Jordan
Jordan’s investigation was encouraged by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who said tech companies had “become arms of the Democratic Party.”
AP

Facebook also pledged to limit the ability of users on its platform to share the same article.

The London-based Global Disinformation Index, which receives State Department funding, also blacklisted The Post and nine other outlets last December, labeling them as “risky” and potential spreaders of false information.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) in December called on Facebook and Google to be investigated after Republicans won the House majority.

“These now have become arms of the Democratic Party, arms of the Biden administration,” he told Maria Bartiromo on Fox News at the time.

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