Trump Appears to Make First Social Media Post Since Leaving White House

Trump Appears to Make First Social Media Post Since Leaving White House
President Donald Trump speaks at the "Stop the Steal" rally in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021. (Jenny Jing/The Epoch Times)
Zachary Stieber
2/5/2021
Updated:
2/11/2021
Update: Gab said former President Donald Trump has not created an account on their platform. A description of the account “realdonaldtrump“ says that it is ”reserved for the 45th President of the United States of America. This account is an uncensored Twitter archive and shares email statements sent by The Office of Donald J. Trump.”
Former President Donald Trump’s account on the social media website Gab was active this week, in what appeared to be his first post since leaving the White House last month.

The account posted a copy of the letter Trump’s lawyers wrote to Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), the House of Representatives’ lead impeachment manager.

In the letter, they rejected his attempt to get Trump to testify in the upcoming impeachment trial.

Requests for comment to Trump’s political action committee and his lead impeachment defense lawyer weren’t immediately returned.

Former Trump campaign lawyer Jenna Ellis joined Gab this week. Other current and former advisers are active on the website.

Trump had not posted there since Jan. 8.

On that day, he posted twice, including a notice that he wouldn’t be attending the inauguration on Jan. 20. Trump left Washington on Inauguration Day, hours before his rival Joe Biden was sworn into office.

Trump is permanently banned from Twitter for allegedly glorifying violence in the wake of the storming of the U.S. Capitol. Trump accused Twitter of going “further and further in banning free speech” and coordinating “with the Democrats and the Radical Left” to silence him and his supporters.
Facebook has also banned Trump indefinitely, a decision that is currently being reviewed by its Oversight Board.
Trump was also removed or suspended from other social media sites, including Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitch.

Trump has floated starting a rival to the companies that banned him. Parler, an emerging competitor to Twitter before being kicked off Amazon’s servers, never drew the former president, but he has been a member of Gab since August 2016. Trump has over 1.3 million followers on Gab, which owns its own servers after facing a deplatforming effort several years ago.

“Most technology startups have the luxury of using third-party cloud hosting providers like Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, and others. Gab does not have this luxury. Over the past four years we have been banned from multiple cloud hosting providers and were told that if we didn’t like it we should ‘build our own.’ So, that’s exactly what we did,” CEO Andrew Torba wrote in a blog post last year.

Gab bills itself as “The Free Speech Social Network” and says its mission is “to defend, protect, and preserve free speech online for all people.” Gab emphasized on its website that “political speech that is protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution will be allowed on the platform.” Illegal activity, such as pornography and threats of violence, aren’t allowed.