NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 In an interview this week, Twitter owner Elon Musk said users making false claims of stolen elections 鈥渨ill be corrected鈥 on the platform.
Prompted by a CNBC reporter for extra assurance that would happen, Musk responded, 鈥淥h yeah, 100%.鈥
Yet many such claims have thrived on Twitter in the week since former President Donald Trump spent much of digging in on that was 鈥渞igged鈥 against him. Twitter posts that amplified those have thousands of shares with no visible enforcement, a review of posts on the platform shows.
The contrast between Musk鈥檚 promise and the extent the claims are spreading on Twitter underscores a major challenge for social media companies trying to call out election conspiracy theories and falsehoods that Trump and his supporters continue to promote. That will only grow as the nation prepares for a presidential election next year in which Trump is again vying to be the Republican nominee.
It鈥檚 unclear whether Musk and his , Linda Yaccarino, are planning any changes to Twitter to crack down on the misinformation, which election experts and tech accountability advocates say heightens and .
鈥淭alk is cheap,鈥 said David Becker, a former U.S. Justice Department lawyer who now leads the nonprofit Center for Election Innovation and Research. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good that he acknowledges that it鈥檚 important for Twitter to act responsibly. 鈥 But then we have to see this action actually taken, because it鈥檚 happening right now.鈥
An analysis by the media intelligence firm Zignal Labs on behalf of The Associated Press surfaced the 10 most widely shared tweets promoting a 鈥渞igged election鈥 narrative in the five days following Trump鈥檚 town hall.
While Twitter has a system in place for users to add context to misleading tweets, the 10 posts, which collectively amassed more than 43,000 retweets, had no such notes attached.
The most widely shared tweets included false claims from U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Kari Lake, a Republican who lost her bid for Arizona governor last year.
Twitter鈥檚 policy on civic integrity and misleading information says it 鈥渕ay鈥 label or remove 鈥渦nverified information about election rigging,鈥 but the 10 tweets and dozens of others claiming a 鈥渟tolen鈥 or 鈥渞igged鈥 election in or in recent days remained live and unlabeled on the platform as of Thursday, an AP search found.
In January 2022, months before Musk took over the platform that October, Twitter had already confirmed to CNN that it had stopped taking action against 2020 election misinformation, saying its policy was meant for use during an election cycle, not long after one.
False claims that the 2020 election was illegitimate have continued to gain traction on the platform and across social media since then, propelled by Trump, whose recent media appearances show he is making them a of his campaign for the GOP nomination.
Tech accountability advocates said it's difficult to monitor content on a scale as large as Twitter and they note that Twitter is not the only platform where election misinformation surfaces. TikTok, Facebook, Instagram and other social media sites also play a role in spreading falsehoods.
But since he took over, Musk has , overhauled Twitter's and that had been responsible for moderating posts. Those choices have allowed falsehoods to flourish, said Jesse Lehrich, co-founder of Accountable Tech, a nonprofit watchdog group.
鈥淚 think they already had inadequate resources 鈥 but there鈥檚 no doubt that he鈥檚 making it worse,鈥 Lehrich said. 鈥淎nd he鈥檚 effectively fired everyone responsible for trust and safety at Twitter, so at this point, they couldn鈥檛 enforce their own civic integrity policies if they tried.鈥
Twitter sent an automated reply when the AP asked for comment, as Twitter does to most media inquiries, and did not provide a response to the continued spread of election misinformation.
In an ideal world, platforms would help reduce the spread of false claims online with policies such as blocking known misinformation sources, labeling it, adopting community enforcement standards and deprioritizing misinformation in trending topics, said Anjana Susarla, a social media researcher and professor at Michigan State University.
Complicating Twitter's response to the misinformation is Musk's own use of the platform. He has used his Twitter account to amplify election-related conspiracy theories.
Last week, he tweeted a reply to a false claim that a conference hosted by the Center for Election Innovation and Research was 鈥渟ecret鈥 and 鈥淗YPER PARTISAN.鈥
In the message broadcast to his nearly 140 million followers, Musk called the session 鈥渇ar left" and said it was strange that officials from 鈥減ivotal regions鈥 would attend. In fact, the conference had its own with links to its agenda, a list of speakers that included Republicans and Democrats, and a livestream that allowed anyone interested to watch the sessions.
Musk's post drove other Twitter users to see the original tweet and pile on with stolen-election claims.
鈥淗e gets it 鈥 he knows the elections were stolen massively,鈥 one Twitter user replied.
鈥淓xactly. They鈥檙e coordinating the steal for 2024,鈥 wrote another.
Becker, the center鈥檚 executive director, said when prominent Twitter users amplify falsehoods about election officials, 鈥渢hreats increase to their safety, to their offices, to their staff.鈥
鈥淭hat makes democracy more vulnerable and puts stresses on them as human beings,鈥 he said.
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