Social networking giant Meta announced on Tuesday it would soon reinstate former president Donald Trump's accounts on Facebook and Instagram with "new guardrails," two years after he was banned over the 2021 U.S. Capitol insurrection.
"We will be reinstating Mr. Trump's Facebook and Instagram accounts in the coming weeks," said Nick Clegg, Meta's president of global affairs, in a statement, adding that the move would come with "new guardrails in place to deter repeat offenses."
Going forward, the Republican leader – who has already declared himself a 2024 presidential candidate – could be suspended for up to two years for each violation of platform policies, Clegg said.
It was not clear when or if Trump will return to the platforms, and his representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
But the 76-year-old tycoon reacted in typically bullish fashion, crowing that Facebook had lost "billions of Dollars in value" in his absence.
"Such a thing should never again happen to a sitting President, or anybody else who is not deserving of retribution!" he said on his Truth Social platform.
Facebook banned Trump a day after the January 6, 2021 uprising, when a mob of his supporters seeking to halt the certification of his election defeat to Joe Biden stormed the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
The former reality TV star had spent weeks falsely claiming that the presidential election was stolen from him and he was subsequently impeached for inciting the riot.
In a letter asking for the ban to be overturned, Trump's lawyer Scott Gast said last week that Meta had "dramatically distorted and inhibited the public discourse."
He asked for a meeting to discuss Trump's "prompt reinstatement to the platform" of Facebook, where he had 34 million followers, arguing that his status as the leading contender for the Republican nomination in 2024 justified ending the ban.
American Civil Liberties Union executive director Anthony Romero said Meta was making "the right call" by allowing Trump back onto the social network. "Like it or not, President Trump is one of the country's leading political figures and the public has a strong interest in hearing his speech. Indeed, some of Trump's most offensive social media posts ended up being critical evidence in lawsuits filed against him and his administration," Romero said in a release.
The ACLU has filed more than 400 legal actions against Trump, according to Romero.
Advocacy groups such as Media Matters for America, however, vehemently oppose allowing Trump to exploit Facebook's social networking reach.
"Make no mistake! By allowing Donald Trump back on its platforms, Meta is refueling Trump's misinformation and extremism engine. This will not only have an impact on Instagram and Facebook users, but it also presents intensified threats to civil society and an existential threat to United States democracy as a whole," said Media Matters president Angelo Carusone.
A U.S. congressional committee recommended in December that Trump be prosecuted for his role in the U.S. Capitol assault.
His Twitter account, which has 88 million followers, was also blocked after the riot, leaving him to communicate through Truth Social, where he has fewer than five million followers.
Trump's shock victory in 2016 was credited in part to his leverage of social media and his enormous digital reach.
Andrew Selepak, a University of Florida professor specializing in social media, suggested that Facebook does not want to go to war with Trump's supporters in Congress, who are likely to protest if he were kept off the platform.
"Trump needs the platform for fundraising and Facebook does not want to be called before Congress," Selepak tweeted.
Conservative Republican leaders have raged against Trump being booted from Facebook, while a group of Democrats in Congress last month urged Meta to extend the ban to keep "dangerous and unfounded election denial content off its platform."
New Twitter owner Elon Musk reinstated Trump's account last November, days after Trump announced a fresh White House run. He has yet to post.