Karine Jean-Pierre knows who's to blame for a Dem Rep getting carjacked in...
Will there be camps? Fairfax County decrees 're-education' for students, hides it from...
WATCH: A Tucker Carlson fan trolls a live broadcast of Fox News hard...
Bromance: Ilhan Omar looks at Matt Gaetz like he would make a good...
Leftist activist mourned after 'incomprehensible' stabbing death on New York sidewalk
New acting House Speaker's reported decision about Nancy Pelosi makes him 'already a...
Sen. John Cornyn says former Speaker McCarthy was subjected to a 'terrorist attack'
Death penalty for child r*pists goes into effect in Florida, sort of
Now what? All eyes are on House Republicans as they seek compromise on...
District attorney explains how a zero bail policy will make the country safer
Oy Gevalt! Mondaire Jones thinks he's found the REAL culprits of McCarthy's fall.
Decision time! McCarthy reportedly makes a decision on House leadership race
Egads: Video of bizarre, unsafe gun range practice is making Twitter/X cringe
WATCH: Acting Speaker of the House McHenry slams the gavel HARD in frustration
'Diversity hire from Maryland' The Democrats' official account gets fact-checked on 'histo...

Judge wants Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to explain how she decides to block people on Twitter

As you know, President Donald Trump lost a lawsuit over whether he, as an elected public official, could block people on Twitter, or if that violated the free speech rights of the American people. If that holds true for the president, though, does it also hold true for members of Congress and other public officials?

Advertisement

The New York Post reports that Ocasio-Cortez’ campaign manager, Rebecca Rodriguez, explained in a hearing that her boss blocks people “if she feels the posts start reaching a point where it’s not constructive, where it’s an attack and where the person becomes so polarizing that she cannot have a conversation with them and they’re amplifying their platform.”

However, the judge thinks that he has to hear from Ocasio-Cortez herself.

Dov Hikind is among those suing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, his elected representative, of blocking him and others on Twitter.

Advertisement

Yep.

That’s what we’re trying to figure out — if what’s good for President Trump applies to Congress as well.

Advertisement


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement