Frazao failed to include any information or commentary showing these claims from Republicans are false. Instead, she included quotes from Republicans making the accusation. In her first report, Frazao cited Twitter’s restriction of Donald Trump Jr.’s account for breaking its rules as an example of supposed bias. In the second report, Frazao aired without pushback Rep. Jim Jordan’s (R-OH) claim that “Big Tech is out to get conservatives. That’s not a suspicion, that’s not a hunch, that’s a fact.” The reality, as CNN chief media correspondent Brian Stelter said on Wednesday, is that “the claims about bias in tech platforms are anecdotal, not backed up by data or science. These are stories, not statistics.”
Media Matters’ studies consistently show that there is absolutely no evidence of anti-conservative bias on Facebook in particular. Right-wing sources dominate some politicized topics on Facebook, such as abortion and Black Lives Matter protests. On average, right-leaning Facebook pages consistently get more weekly interactions than left-leaning pages -- a trend that continued in the week leading up to Wednesday’s hearing.
Columbia Journalism Review and news outlets including Mashable, The Verge, and others have also debunked these claims.
But Republicans, and their conservative media allies such as Sinclair, repeatedly make these baseless accusations because they are effective, and President Donald Trump is especially receptive to these lies.
In the future, Sinclair’s reporters should present accurate information on this topic to their local television news audiences and stop spreading Republican misinformation.