DAN FRIETH
Tensions between the United States and the UK are intensifying over Britain’s new internet speech law, with the Trump administration warning Prime Minister Keir Starmer against punishing American tech firms through foreign censorship disguised as regulation.
The Online Safety Act, now in force, gives the British government wide-reaching authority to fine social media companies for so-called “harmful” content, even when that content is legal speech, particularly when that speech is by American users on American platforms. Fines can run as high as $24 million or 10% of a company’s global revenue.
Officials close to President Donald Trump have made it clear that they see the British law as a direct interference with American constitutional rights. A senior figure in the US State Department told The Telegraph, “President Trump has made it clear that free speech is one of our most cherished freedoms as Americans…We will continue to monitor developments in the UK with great interest and concern.”
Since enforcement began, the UK’s media regulator Ofcom has reportedly sent formal notices to several US tech companies, instructing them to comply or face penalties. These letters have ignited backlash among American lawmakers, many of whom argue that Britain has crossed a line by trying to dictate speech rules to American businesses and citizens.
House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan accused the UK government of threatening core freedoms. “Ask Apple and they would view it as a $500 million attack,” he said. “As long as foreign legislators, judges, and regulators continue their attempts to silence US citizens, we will not stop fighting back.”
Jordan, along with other members of Congress, has taken his concerns directly to British ministers, raising objections with Science Secretary Peter Kyle. He also criticized efforts by Labour to associate political opponents of the bill, like Nigel Farage, with criminality, calling such tactics outrageous and dangerous.
The legislation claims to focus on shielding children from harmful content online. But opponents see that the real effect is forcing platforms to censor content that hasn’t broken any laws.
Platforms like Reddit, X, and more have already introduced new age verification systems to comply, with some describing the move as coerced digital surveillance.
During a recent visit to the UK, Trump warned Starmer personally not to touch his platform, Truth Social. “Well, I don’t think he’s going to censor my site, because I say only good things,” he quipped.
The US government has already been engaging British officials behind the scenes. Earlier this year, diplomats from the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour met UK civil servants in London to push back against what they saw as threats to open expression. Samuel Samson, a senior adviser, led the visit.
The administration’s concern has also been fueled by specific criminal cases involving speech. Lucy Connolly, a former childcarer, was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for a post on social media after the killing of three girls in Southport.
Three Republican lawmakers recently traveled to Britain for a summit organized by Nigel Farage. Speaking to GB News, Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan said, “We’re concerned about free expression in the United Kingdom. We’re primarily concerned about the impacts your laws could have on American citizens.”
He argued that the right to speak is the bedrock upon which all other freedoms rest, and warned that foreign censorship efforts, such as the UK’s law and the EU’s Digital Services Act, risk damaging that foundation.
“We had a witness last year in Congress, a journalist from Canada who made a great statement. She said, ‘free expression is the hallmark of Western civilization…The alternative to that is frightening.’”
Scott Fitzgerald, a Republican from Wisconsin, said US companies are already facing significant legal battles over the implications of these foreign censorship laws. “You will see a continued fight step by step to make sure this doesn’t creep into America,” he said.
Jordan was especially scathing in his criticism of how governments handle speech-related issues. “You look at recent history, and it seems to me the biggest purveyor for misinformation is the government,” he said. “We don’t want harmful material getting to kids, but there’s a big difference between that and speech criticising the government, for goodness’ sake.”
The Labour government maintains that the Online Safety Act is a necessary safeguard for young internet users. But across the Atlantic, and increasingly at home, it is increasingly viewed as an authoritarian overstep and a threat to the very freedoms that are supposed to underpin democratic societies.
This article (The White House Puts UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Notice Over UK’s Dangerous Online Censorship Laws) was created and published by Reclaim the Net and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author Dan Frieth
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White House Warns Starmer: Stop Threatening US Tech Companies’ Free Speech
TOBY YOUNG
The White House has warned Sir Keir Starmer to stop threatening American tech companies amid mounting backlash over Britain’s online safety law. The Telegraph has more.
Members of Donald Trump’s administration are monitoring the Online Safety Act with “great interest and concern” after key allies said it was censoring free speech and imposing unfair burdens on US businesses.
The law, which regulates online speech, allows the British government to levy massive fines on companies like Apple, Truth Social, and X if it finds that rules on hate speech have been broken.
Those in the President’s inner circle see the potential penalties as an unwarranted foreign intervention into American free speech.
“President Trump has made it clear that free speech is one of our most cherished freedoms as Americans,” a senior US State Department official told the Telegraph.
“Accordingly, we have taken decisive action against foreign actors who have engaged in extraterritorial censorship affecting our companies and fellow citizens.
“We will continue to monitor developments in the UK with great interest and concern.”
Since the law came into effect last week, Ofcom, the UK’s online regulator, has written to several American firms ordering them to conform to the act, in letters seen by the Telegraph.
It has sparked outrage from US lawmakers and legal experts, who say the overreach is a threat by the UK to silence American companies and citizens.
Congressman Jim Jordan, chair of the House Judiciary GOP committee, said the law was an attack on American companies.
“Ask Apple and they would view it as a $500 million attack,” he told the Telegraph.
“There’s general concern… and then there’s concern on how this impacts American citizens, American companies and infringes on our First Amendment.
“As long as foreign legislators, judges, and regulators continue their attempts to silence US citizens, we will not stop fighting back.”
Mr Jordan also raised concerns over the bill’s overreach with Peter Kyle, the Science Secretary, on Wednesday.
Under the law, social media giants face fines of up to £18m ($24m), or 10 per cent of their annual revenue, if they fail to remove content deemed harmful from their platforms.
While the measures are designed to protect young people from dangerous content, critics argue that it pressures platforms into censoring users by removing their content if it is disliked by others, even though it is perfectly legal.
Social media apps such as X, Reddit and TikTok have been forced to introduce age verification checks since the bill came into effect last week.
The warning to Sir Keir is the latest sign of Donald Trump’s willingness to intervene in domestic British affairs amid a growing transatlantic rift over the protection of freedom of speech.
During his meeting with the Prime Minister in Scotland, Mr Trump warned Sir Keir not to censor his social-media platform, Truth Social.
“Well, I don’t think he’s going to censor my site, because I say only good things,” Mr Trump said.
In May, the Telegraph revealed that the president sent US officials to meet British pro-life activists over censorship concerns.
The diplomats from the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour (BDHL) travelled to London in March in an effort to “affirm the importance of freedom of expression in the UK and across Europe”.
Led by Samuel Samson, a senior adviser in the state department, they met with officials from the Foreign Office and challenged Ofcom over the Online Safety Act.
Since then, the Trump administration has also raised questions about the conviction and sentencing of several high profile cases like that of Lucy Connolly.
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