Senator Marshall Leads Investigation into Google’s Censorship of President Trump Assassination Search Results

Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Roger Marshall, M.D. sent a letter to Sundar Pichai, Chief Executive Officer of Google, demanding answers for his company’s suppression of search terms related to the assassination attempt against President Trump on July 13.

In the letter, Senator Marshall requested a full investigation and Congressional hearing on Google’s censorship of conservatives and blatant bias. Additionally, Senator Marshall’s letter outlines Google’s repeated history of discrimination towards conservative viewpoints. The letter comes after Senator Marshall sounded the alarm on Google’s suppression of searches regarding the Trump assassination and announced an investigation into this incident earlier this week.

Fox Business published an exclusive article on Senator Marshall’s letter investigating Google’s practices. You may click HERE to read the story. 

You may click HERE or scroll below to read Senator Marshall’s full letter to Google CEO.

Mr. Sundar Pichai

Chief Executive Officer

Google LLC

1600 Amphitheatre Parkway

Mountainview, CA 94043

Mr. Pichai—

Google’s failure to provide suggestions related to the assassination attempt against President Trump on July 13, 2024 as part of its search function is yet another example of censorship against conservative voices and violates the intent of Section 230. Omitting suggestions to the most obvious and recent victim of an assassination attempt shows a willful discrimination against President Trump and users of your search engine. Furthermore, Google’s decision to selectively erect hurdles to those seeking to obtain more information regarding one of the most important events in recent American history places you in the role of information arbiter, well beyond the scope of your firm’s purported purpose. Regrettably, I am not surprised by this glaring omission given Google’s demonstrated history of manipulating results and discrimination against conservative ideology.

Google advertises itself as a search engine and aggregator, not a censor. If Google wishes to become to a publishing firm or editor, Congress could then regulate accordingly by removing the sacred Section 230 protections your firm has long used to silence conservative voices. 

Over the weekend, Google claimed that “no manual action” was taken to effectuate these results. However, this clarification is woefully inadequate, disingenuous, and misleading. If the autocomplete function is truly reflective of the recent searches completed on Google, the self-learning algorithms should have easily adjusted their autocomplete function during a massive increase in search queries over the last two weeks. 

Google employees have previously raised concerns that the internal unspoken company standard is to play “whatever political side of the fence” that the country is on.Furthermore, some of my Republican colleagues have raised concerns regarding recommendation system algorithms under the umbrella of Alphabet and the bias of content they provide to operators seeking information. 

Given your firm’s repeated behavior, my colleagues and I will be initiating an investigation into Google’s censorship, bias, and constricting the free flow of information. Furthermore, as a member of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee (HSGAC), I will do everything in my power to encourage fellow Committee members to force Google to testify under oath regarding these practices. 

I ask that you provide the answers to the following questions no later than Friday, August 9th, 2024. 

1.     Why does Google’s search suggestion function create automated entries for “assassination attempt on President Truman” but not “assassination attempt on President Trump”? 

2.     Who oversees the algorithmic search function at Google? 

3.     Can you discuss why you believe hiding violent search results is better for the public discourse than offering up-to-date information?

4.     What decisions were made at Google in the aftermath of the July 13th assassination attempt in regards to searches for the July 13th attack on President Trump? 

5.     Please provide any written correspondence between employees at Google regarding updating the search function in response to the July 13th attack

6.     If autocomplete systems have protections against “political violence” why does the system make suggestions after querying the words “political violence”?

7.     What are some other global instances in which Google took the same precautions as they have with the events of July 13th?

8.     What is Google’s timeline for adding the attempted assassination of Donald Trump to it autocomplete search feature?

9.      What is Google’s timeline for making the attempted assassination of Donald Trump a search Topic, similar to that of the attempted assassination of Harry Truman, on Google?

I look forward to your response,

Sincerely,

Roger Marshall, M.D.

U.S. Senator

cc:

Jessica Rosenworcel

Chair, Federal Communications Commission

45 L ST NE,

Washington, DC, 20554

Lina Khan

Chair, Federal Trade Commission

600 Pennsylvania Ave NW

Washington, DC, 20580

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