Facebook owner Meta is preparing to announce whether it will allow former US President Donald Trump back on to Facebook and Instagram, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.
The social media giant had previously said it will decide by
January 7 whether to allow the former president to return. However, that
decision is now expected to be announced later in the month, the newspaper
said, citing a person familiar with the matter.
Meta has set up a working group to focus on the matter,
according to people with knowledge of its operations, the report said, adding
that the group includes staffers from the public policy and communications
teams, as well as from the content policy team.
Meta did not immediately respond to a request by Reuters for
comment.
The development comes after Elon Musk, Twitter's new owner,
revoked a permanent ban on Trump in November last year on the social media
platform after polling users.
Trump maintained that he had no interest in returning to
Twitter.
"I don't see any reason for it," the former
president had said via video when asked whether he planned to return to Twitter
by a panel at the Republican Jewish Coalition's annual leadership meeting.
Trump has mounted relentless attacks on the integrity of US
voting since his 2020 election defeat and launched a bid in November to regain
the presidency in 2024, aiming to pre-empt potential Republican rivals.
Last month, Meta agreed to pay $725 million to resolve a
class-action lawsuit accusing the social media giant of allowing third parties,
including Cambridge Analytica, to access users' personal information.
The proposed settlement, which was disclosed in a court
filing in December, would resolve a long-running lawsuit prompted by
revelations in 2018 that Facebook had allowed the British political consulting
firm Cambridge Analytica to access data of as many as 87 million users.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs called the proposed settlement
the largest to ever be achieved in a US data privacy class action and the most
that Meta has ever paid to resolve a class action lawsuit. © Reuters