Facebook’s CEO meets with conservatives; Zuckerberg responds to accused bias

Published 9:39 am Thursday, May 19, 2016

LOS ANGELES — Mark Zuckerberg on Wednesday held a wide-ranging discussion with a group of conservative commentators who said afterward the Facebook CEO acknowledged the giant social network has a problem reaching conservatives.

The meeting at Facebook’s Menlo Park, California, headquarters came about after a report accused the company of harboring a bias against conservative views.

S.E. Cupp, a columnist with the New York Daily News who attended the meeting, said Facebook executives “were very clear to acknowledge that there is a problem and the problem is a serious one.”

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Cupp said Zuckerberg, Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, Vice President Joel Kaplan and board member Peter Thiel mostly listened to the 17 conservatives who attended.

While the Facebook executives did not comment further on an internal investigation into allegations of political manipulation, they explained how difficult it would be for Facebook employees to inject bias into what stories make it into the “trending topics” section of the site or on individual users’ news feeds, Cupp said.

The Facebook team also said any such tampering would be “philosophically against both the mission of the company and Mark’s personal mission,” Cupp said. “I believed them.”

Rob Bluey, editor in chief of the website The Daily Signal, made similar comments to Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren shortly after the meeting ended.

“They certainly acknowledged that there was a problem with getting the message out to conservatives,” he said.

Facebook spokesman Andy Stone confirmed that was the tenor of the meeting.

In a Facebook post afterward, Zuckerberg did not directly respond to allegations that Facebook employees suppressed conservative stories on its “trending topics” feature. But he said, “I know many conservatives don’t trust that our platform surfaces content without a political bias.”

“I wanted to hear their concerns personally and have an open conversation about how we can build trust. I want to do everything I can to make sure our teams uphold the integrity of our products,” he wrote.