[House Hearing, 119 Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                   EUROPE'S THREAT TO AMERICAN SPEECH
                             AND INNOVATION

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                     U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                      WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2025

                               __________

                           Serial No. 119-33

                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
         
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               Available via: http://judiciary.house.gov
               
                                __________

                   U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
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                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                        JIM JORDAN, Ohio, Chair

DARRELL ISSA, California             JAMIE RASKIN, Maryland, Ranking 
ANDY BIGGS, Arizona                      Member
TOM McCLINTOCK, California           JERROLD NADLER, New York
THOMAS P. TIFFANY, Wisconsin         ZOE LOFGREN, California
THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky              STEVE COHEN, Tennessee
CHIP ROY, Texas                      HENRY C. ``HANK'' JOHNSON, Jr., 
SCOTT FITZGERALD, Wisconsin              Georgia
BEN CLINE, Virginia                  ERIC SWALWELL, California
LANCE GOODEN, Texas                  TED LIEU, California
JEFFERSON VAN DREW, New Jersey       PRAMILA JAYAPAL, Washington
TROY E. NEHLS, Texas                 J. LUIS CORREA, California
BARRY MOORE, Alabama                 MARY GAY SCANLON, Pennsylvania
KEVIN KILEY, California              JOE NEGUSE, Colorado
HARRIET M. HAGEMAN, Wyoming          LUCY McBATH, Georgia
LAUREL M. LEE, Florida               DEBORAH K. ROSS, North Carolina
WESLEY HUNT, Texas                   BECCA BALINT, Vermont
RUSSELL FRY, South Carolina          JESUS G. ``CHUY'' GARCIA, Illinois
GLENN GROTHMAN, Wisconsin            SYDNEY KAMLAGER-DOVE, California
BRAD KNOTT, North Carolina           JARED MOSKOWITZ, Florida
MARK HARRIS, North Carolina          DANIEL S. GOLDMAN, New York
ROBERT F. ONDER, Jr., Missouri       JASMINE CROCKETT, Texas
DEREK SCHMIDT, Kansas
BRANDON GILL, Texas
MICHAEL BAUMGARTNER, Washington

               CHRISTOPHER HIXON, Majority Staff Director
                ARTHUR EWENCZYK, Minority Staff Director
                                 ------                                
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                      Wednesday, September 3, 2025
                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page

The Honorable Jim Jordan, Chair of the Committee on the Judiciary 
  from the State of Ohio.........................................     1
The Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the Committee on 
  the Judiciary from the State of Maryland.......................     5

                               WITNESSES

Morgan Reed, President, ACT | The App Association
  Oral Testimony.................................................     8
  Prepared Testimony.............................................    11
Lorcan Price, Legal Counsel, Alliance Defending Freedom 
  International
  Oral Testimony.................................................    38
  Prepared Testimony.............................................    40
The Hon. Nigel Farage, Member of Parliament (MP), United Kingdom
  Oral Testimony.................................................    61
  Prepared Testimony.............................................    63
David Kaye, Clinical Professor of Law, Irvine School of Law, 
  University of California
  Oral Testimony.................................................    69
  Prepared Testimony.............................................    71

          LETTERS, STATEMENTS, ETC. SUBMITTED FOR THE HEARING

All materials submitted for the record by the Committee on the 
  Judiciary are listed below.....................................   142

Material submitted by the Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member 
  of the Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Maryland, 
  for the record
    A fact check document entitled, ``Debunking Republicans' 
        Misleading Report on the EU's Digital Services Act 
        (DSA),'' Jul. 25, 2025, Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, 
        House Committee on the Judiciary Democrats
    An article entitled, ``Meta to Pay $25 Million to Settle 2021 
        Trump Lawsuit: President had sued social-media company 
        after his accounts were suspended following Jan. 6 
        riot,'' Jan. 29, 2025, The Wall Street Journal
    A Supreme Court Syllabus, Murthy, Surgeon General, et al. v. 
        Missouri et al., Jun. 26, 2024
    A clip entitled, ``British Free Speech Under Threat? Nigel 
        Farage says UK is an authoritarian state like North 
        Korea,'' Sept. 3, 2025, GBN
A fact check document entitled, ``Fact Check: UK woman jailed for 
  inciting racial hatred, not posting hurtful words,'' Oct. 29, 
  2024, Reuters Fact Check, submitted by the Honorable Jerrold 
  Nadler, a Member of the Committee on the Judiciary from the 
  State of New York, for the record
An article entitled, ``Gavin Newsom sues Fox News for $787M in 
  defamation case over Trump call,'' Jun. 27, 2025, Politico, 
  submitted by the Honorable Darrell Issa, a Member of the 
  Committee on the Judiciary from the State of California, for 
  the record
Material submitted by the Honorable Andy Biggs, a Member of the 
  Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Arizona, for the 
  record
    An article entitled, ``Obama Press Attacks Degrade the First 
        Amendment In The Name of Security,'' Mar. 20, 2014, The 
        Center for Internet and Society, Stanford Law School
    A document entitled, ``GDP Growth Comparison: EU vs. US 
        (1998-2023).''
    An article entitled, ``Biden's press freedom legacy: Empty 
        words and hypocrisy,'' Jan. 20, 2025, Freedom of the 
        Press Foundation
    An article entitled, ``Massive Government Censorship During 
        and About Covid,'' Apr. 18, 2025, The New Civil Liberties 
        Alliances
    An article entitled, ``The 5th Circuit Agrees That Federal 
        Officials Unconstitutionally `Coerced' or `Encouraged' 
        Online Censorship,'' Sept. 11, 2023, Reason
    An article entitled, ``The Government's Sprawling Effort To 
        Censor (True) Information During the Pandemic,'' Apr. 24, 
        2023, Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) (Not 
        available at the time of publication.)
    An article entitled, ``Feds blew $267M fighting 
        `misinformation' under Biden--as Trump vows to ban 
        `censorship cartel,' '' Nov. 22, 2024, The New York Post
    An article entitled, ``How the FBI Violated the Privacy 
        Rights of Tens of Thousands of Americans,'' Oct. 22, 
        2019, The Brennan Center for Justice
    An article entitled, ``Inspector General report on FBI's FISA 
        abuse tells us one thing: We need radical reform,'' Dec. 
        10, 2019, USA Today
    An article entitled, ``UK comedy writer Graham Linehan 
        arrested over social media posts criticizing trans 
        activists,'' Sept. 2, 2025, Fox News
    An article entitled, ``Why did Lucy Connolly receive a 31-
        month sentence for Southport tweet,'' Aug. 21, 2025, The 
        Independent
    An article entitled, ``Policing Thought Crime Should Have No 
        Place in the U.K.,'' Jan. 24, 2023, Newsweek
    An article entitled, ``Britain's emerging police state,'' 
        Jan. 30, 2025, The Expose
    An article entitled, ``Knock knock, it's the Thought Police: 
        As thousands of criminals go uninvestigated, detectives 
        call on a grandmother. Her crime? She went on Facebook to 
        criticise Labour councillors at the centre of the `Hope 
        you Die' WhatsApp scandal exposed by the MoS,'' Feb. 22, 
        2025, Daily Wire (Not available at the time of 
        publication.)
    An article entitled, ``U.K. Steps Up Free Speech Crackdown as 
        Armed Police Arrest Comedy Writer Graham Linehan at 
        Heathrow Airport,'' Sept. 2, 2025, Gateway Pundit
    An article entitled, ``Britian's New Thought Police: How 
        Labour Plans to Police Your Online Speech,'' Jul. 27, 
        2025, Labour Heartlands: Left Wing News Views & Opinion
Materials submitted by the Honorable Steve Cohen, a Member of the 
  Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Tennessee, for the 
  record
    A letter to Commissioner Henna Virkkunen, Commissioner for 
        Tech Sovereignty, Security and Democracy, European 
        Commission, from the scholars of digital civil liberties 
        and the European Union's Digital Services Act (DSA), 
        Sept. 3, 2025
    A letter to the Honorable Jim Jordan, Chair of the Committee 
        on the Judiciary from the State of Ohio, and the 
        Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the Committee 
        on the Judiciary from the State of Maryland, from the 
        scholars of digital civil liberties and the European 
        Union's Digital Services Act (DSA), Sept. 3, 2025
Materials submitted by the Honorable Pramila Jayapal, a Member of 
  the Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Washington, 
  for the record
    A letter to the Honorable Jim Jordan, Chair of the Committee 
        on the Judiciary from the State of Ohio, and the 
        Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the Committee 
        on the Judiciary from the State of Maryland, and the 
        Members of Congress, from The Open Markets Institute, 
        Sept. 3, 2025
    A letter to the Honorable Jim Jordan, Chair of the Committee 
        on the Judiciary from the State of Ohio, and the 
        Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the Committee 
        on the Judiciary from the State of Maryland, from Berin 
        Szoka President, TechFreedom, Sept. 3, 2025
    An article entitled, ``Apple is top funder of lobby group 
        that says it represents small developers,'' Sept. 19, 
        2022, The App Association
    An article entitled, ``The False Choice Between Digital 
        Regulation and Innovation,'' Vol. 119, No. 2 (2024), 
        Northwestern University Law Review
Materials submitted by the Honorable J. Luis Correa, a Member of 
  the Committee on the Judiciary from the State of California, 
  for the record
    A letter to the Honorable Donald J. Trump, President of the 
        United States, The White House, from the Honorable J. 
        Luis Correa, a Member of the Committee on the Judiciary 
        from the State of California, and the Honorable Scott 
        Fitzgerald, a Member of the Committee on the Judiciary 
        from the State of Wisconsin, Apr. 9, 2025
    A report entitled, ``The future of European competitiveness--
        Part A | A competitiveness strategy for Europe,'' Sept. 
        2024, European Union
    A report entitled ``New Campaign: How Digital Markets Act Has 
        Become Europe's Digital Curtain: Europe's tech law has 
        turned Europeans into second-class digital citizens,'' 
        Feb. 10, 2025, Chamber of Progress (Not available at the 
        time of publication.)
    An article entitled, ``Six Ways the DMA Is Backfiring on 
        Europe by Harming Users, Innovation, and Allies,'' Jun. 
        30, 2025, Information Technology & Innovation Foundation 
        (ITIF)
    An article entitled, ``EU regulations impose heavy costs on 
        US companies, study finds,'' Jul. 28, 2025, Washington 
        Examiner
    An article entitled, ``The Tech Industry Is Huge--and 
        Europe's Share of It Is Very Small,'' May 20, 2025, The 
        Wall Street Journal
    An article entitled, ``Europe's tech law has turned Europeans 
        into second-class digital citizens,'' Feb. 10, 2025, 
        Chamber of Progress
An article entitled, ``Nigel Farage: Epstein files should be 
  released,'' Jul. 31, 2025, Politico, submitted by the Honorable 
  Jared Moskowitz, a Member of the Committee on the Judiciary 
  from the State of Florida, for the record
An article entitled, ``Study says ChatGPT giving teens dangerous 
  advice ondrugs, alcohol and suicide,'' Aug. 6, 2025, Associated 
  Press, submitted by the Honorable Becca Balint, a Member of the 
  Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Vermont, for the 
  record

                                APPENDIX

Material submitted by the Honorable Jim Jordan, Chair of the 
  Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Ohio, for the 
  record
    A statement from Neil Chilson, Head of AI Policy, Abundance 
        Institute, entitled, ``Ban All Imports of Europe's 
        `Regulate-First' Attitude,'' Abundance Institute, Sept. 
        2, 2025
    A statement from Yael Ossowski, Deputy Director, and James 
        Czerniawski Head of Emerging Technology Policy, Consumer 
        Choice Center, entitled, ``The Red, White, and Blocked: 
        Europe's Threat to American Voices and Innovation,'' 
        Sept. 2, 2025, Consumer Choice Center
    A statement from Joseph V. Coniglio, Director, Antitrust and 
        Innovation Policy, Schumpeter Project on Competition 
        Policy, Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, 
        Sept. 3, 2025
    A statement from Taxpayers Protection Alliance, Sept. 1, 2025
    A statement from Jessica Melugin, Director, Center for 
        Technology and Innovation, Competitive Enterprise 
        Institute, Aug. 29, 2025
    A statement from Amy Bos, Director, State and Federal 
        Affairs, NetChoice, Sept. 3, 2025
A letter to the Honorable Andy Biggs, a Member of the Committee 
  on the Judiciary from the State of Arizona, from Seth Stern, 
  Director of Advocacy, Freedom of the Press Foundation, Sept. 5, 
  2025, submitted by the Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member 
  of the Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Maryland, 
  for the record

                 QUESTIONS AND RESPONSES FOR THE RECORD

Questions to the Hon. Nigel Farage, Member of Parliament (MP), 
  United Kingdom, submitted by the Honorable Jamie Raskin, 
  Ranking Member of the Committee on the Judiciary from the State 
  of Maryland, for the record
Questions to Lorcan Price, Legal Counsel, Alliance Defending 
  Freedom International, submitted by the Honorable Scott 
  Fitzgerald, a Member of the Committee on the Judiciary from the 
  State of Wisconsin, for the record
  A responses to questions from Lorcan Price, Legal Counsel, 
      Alliance Defending Freedom International
Questions to Morgan Reed, President, ACT | The App Association, 
  submitted by the Honorable Scott Fitzgerald, a Member of the 
  Committee on the Judiciary from the State of Wisconsin, and the 
  Honorable Jerrold Nadler, a Member of the Committee on the 
  Judiciary from the State of New York, for the record

 
           EUROPE'S THREAT TO AMERICAN SPEECH AND INNOVATION

                              ----------                              


                      Wednesday, September 3, 2025

                        House of Representatives

                       Committee on the Judiciary

                             Washington, DC

    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 a.m., in Room 
2141, Rayburn House Office Building, the Hon. Jim Jordan [Chair 
of the Committee] presiding.
    Present: Representatives Jordan, Issa, Biggs, McClintock, 
Tiffany, Roy, Fitzgerald, Cline, Gooden, Van Drew, Moore, 
Kiley, Hageman, Lee, Fry, Grothman, Knott, Harris, Onder, Baum-
gartner, Raskin, Nadler, Lofgren, Cohen, Johnson, Jayapal, 
Correa, Scanlon, McBath, Ross, Balint, Garcia, Moskowitz, 
Goldman, and Crockett.
    Chair Jordan. The Committee will come to order. Without 
objection, the Chair is authorized to declare a recess at any 
time. We welcome everyone to today's hearing on Europe's threat 
to American speech and innovation.
    The Chair now recognizes the gentleman from Alabama to lead 
us in the Pledge of Allegiance.
    All. I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States 
of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one 
Nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for 
all.
    Chair Jordan. The Chair is now recognized for an opening 
statement. Then, we will move to the Ranking Member's opening 
statement. Our witnesses will get five minutes.
    I want to just take an opportunity before I even do an 
opening statement to welcome everyone back. Hope everyone had a 
good break. The Ranking Member and I, along with a few other 
Members--Mr. Kiley, Mr. Fitzgerald, Mr. Correa, I think Mr. 
Swalwell and Ms. Crockett--all had a wonderful visit--and Mr. 
Cohen--to Europe, where we talked about this issue, and we've 
learned some valuable information. We look forward to today's 
hearing and hearing from our witnesses. First, you have to 
listen to the Chair and the Ranking Member talk.
    On August 12th of last year, Thierry Breton wrote Elon Musk 
a letter. Thierry Breton is the commissioner in charge of 
enforcement of the Digital Services Act and the Digital 
Marketing Act. In very first sentence, the guy in charge of 
enforcing this legislation passed by the EU writes this:

        Dear Mr. Musk,

        I am writing to you in the context of recent events in the 
        United Kingdom and in relation to the planned broadcast on your 
        platform, X, of a live conversation between a U.S. Presidential 
        candidate and yourself.

Think about it. A guy in Europe in charge of enforcing a 
European Union law writes an American about an American company 
about an American election, and he says the context for the 
letter, the reason for the letter, are events that are 
happening in the U.K., a non-European Union country.
    If that's not Europe trying to influence what happens here, 
I don't know what it is.
    He goes on throughout the letter and says this: ``Measures 
need to be taken to combat disinformation.'' He's telling this 
to Mr. Musk. ``We are concerned about any illegal content you 
may have.'' He ends his letter by saying in the very last 
sentence: ``My services and I will be extremely vigilant to any 
evidence that points to breaches of the Digital Services Act 
and will not hesitate to make full use of our toolbox.''
    He ends the letter with a threat. Before the interview even 
takes place, he's threatening an American running an American 
company about an interview regarding the most important 
election we have, election of the President of the United 
States, and, again, saying the reason for doing so are events 
that are happening in a non-European Union country, the U.K.; 
comments about events happening in the U.K. concerned about 
this, quote, ``spillover effect.'' That is why we're having 
today's hearing. That's why we went to Europe last month--or 
actually, in July to study this issue.
    Now, here's what's interesting. Mr. Breton, after he sends 
this letter, we, this Committee, sent him two letters, and then 
he suddenly resigns. We asked him to come today, but he refused 
to come. We ask him to send written testimony. He refused to do 
that. We asked him to appear--he just wouldn't come.
    It's important to remember what the House Judiciary 
Committee did last Congress. We investigated our government, 
the Biden Administration, their attacks on free expression here 
in the United States, what Michael Shellenberger called, 
journalists called, ``the censorship industrial complex.'' Big 
Government, Big Tech, Big Media, and Big Academia, all working 
together to censor Americans. We learned all kinds of things in 
that investigation.
    We learned, on April 27, 2022, that the Biden 
Administration had established a Disinformation Governance 
Board. That's right. A bunch of bureaucrats going to get 
together and tell you what you can say, what you can tweet, 
what you can post, what you can read, what's misinformation, 
and what's disinformation--and the new term they come up--
what's malinformation.
    Thank goodness, because many of us raised concerns about 
that, they disbanded that Disinformation Governance Board. We 
no longer had that. We heard from journalists like Mr. 
Shellenberger, like Matt Taibbi, regarding the Twitter files. 
We heard from Tulsi Gabbard. We heard from RFK, Jr. All 
Democrats, frankly. In fact, I took some heat for that. ``What 
are you doing bringing Democrats in front of the Judiciary 
Committee?'' We brought them in because they care about the 
First Amendment.
    It was interesting when RFK, Jr., came in to testify, the 
Democrats actually made a motion to go to an Executive Session, 
kick everyone out, no journalists, and no one was allowed. They 
wanted to kick everyone out, go to an Executive Session so no 
one could hear what RFK, Jr., was going to testify to in a 
hearing on censorship. You can't make this stuff up.
    We learned that, on January 23rd--think about that, by the 
way. We learned, on January 23, 2021--maybe point this one out 
first--that there was an email. The third day of the Biden 
Administration, there was an email sent from the White House to 
Twitter which said, ``Take down this tweet ASAP.'' Who 
initiated the tweet? Who had put out the tweet? RFK, Jr. You 
had the Biden Administration trying to censor a fellow Democrat 
who was going to run against him in the Democrat primary. 
Everything in that tweet actually were true statements.
    We learned all that last year. Of course, our investigation 
culminated with the letter from Mr. Zuckerberg, on August 26, 
2024, last year, where he said, ``Yes, the Biden Administration 
pressured us to censor. We did it. We're sorry. And we won't do 
it again.''
    Meta and Facebook has now subsequently changed policy. They 
now go to the community notes policy instead of the, quote, 
``independent fact-checker'' approach that was being used 
before.
    We had one other witness last Congress, journalist from 
Canada, Rupa Subramanya, who I thought said something that was 
really important. She said ``free speech is a core value of 
Western culture.'' That is true. That's what our concern is. 
We're concerned about the attacks on free expression in Europe, 
the censorship, the arrest for offensive posts, and the 
chilling effect it all has on speech.
    We're more concerned, frankly, as Americans about the 
limits the DSA, the Online Safety Act in the U.K., put on 
Americans' First Amendment rights and the shakedown--and that's 
the appropriate term--the shakedown of American tech companies 
under the DSA, the OSA, and the Digital Markets Act in the 
European Union.
    These acts target our tech companies that provide the 
modern town square, and they are the engines of innovation in 
our global economy. Since the turn of the century, European 
tech companies have languished behind their American 
counterparts. European governments have tried everything to 
change this except what might actually work: Deregulating their 
own economy and letting free enterprise flourish. Instead of 
cutting red tape and allowing their own companies to innovate 
and grow, the EU and the U.K. are going after American 
companies that have grown to dominate the global tech 
landscape. Regulations like the EU's Digital Markets Act and 
the U.K.'s Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 
impose burdensome requirements on U.S. tech companies while 
leaving their European counterparts untouched.
    These attacks on American companies won't result in a so-
called European champion. Instead, China wins, as Europe hurts 
both itself and America. They make the user experience worse. 
They distort the digital marketplace by allowing less 
innovative and less efficient foreign companies--foreign 
competitors to simply steal from U.S. tech companies.
    In addition to attacking American tech companies, Europe is 
attacking free speech around the world, including here in 
America. The laws like the Digital Services Act and the Online 
Safety Act are the engines of global censorship regime 
targeting political speech disfavored by European bureaucrats.
    The censorship mechanism is simple: The DSA and the OSA 
effectively require social media platforms to change their 
terms of service to moderate more content. These companies have 
one set of standards that they apply globally because it's 
costly, impractical, and harmful to user privacy to change 
content moderation rules based on the user's location. When 
platforms are forced to change their terms of service to comply 
with European laws, it affects what we see, what we read, and 
what we say online here in America, infringing on Americans' 
First Amendment rights.
    This is no accident. Even The New York Times and The 
Atlantic have acknowledged that these foreign censorship laws 
are intended to have global impact. The European actions have 
proven it. Again, just look at Mr. Breton's letter.
    Supporters say these laws make the online environment safer 
for children, something that we all agree with. We all want to 
protect kids. Censorship laws are never about disinformation, 
child safety, or anything else. They're always about censoring 
criticism of the government.
    Social media is a relatively new technology, but censorship 
is as old as time. Misinformation, disinformation, and hate 
speech labels are always used by the people in power to censor 
their critics. My experience has taught me that today's 
misinformation is tomorrow's truth. We have seen it time and 
time again.
    I always like to point out everything the government told 
us about COVID turned out to be wrong. Everything our 
government told us about COVID. I'm not even talking about 
Europe here. Everything. They told us that the virus didn't 
come from a lab. It sure looks like it did. They told us it 
wasn't gain-of-function research done at the lab. Yes, it was. 
They told us it wasn't our tax money used at the lab. Yes, it 
was. They told us vaccines--they told us that the vaccinated 
can't get it. They told us the vaccinated can't transmit it. 
They told us masks work. They told us a six-feet social 
distance was based on science. They told us this is the first 
virus in history where there's no such thing as natural 
immunity. They were zero for eight. Yet, they're going to 
define with some Disin-formation Governance Board what we can 
say, what we can tweet, what we can read, and what we can post. 
You got to be kidding me.
    As RFK, Jr., testified before our Committee--never forgot 
what he said. He said, ``When you look at history, it is never 
the good guys who are for censorship; it is always the bad 
guys.'' That's our concern. We need to debate. The best way to 
answer bad speech, wrong speech, stupid speech, crazy speech, 
and even hate speech is more speech. We need the First 
Amendment. Our Committee will continue to move legislation that 
protects free speech from threats, including threats from 
abroad.
    With that, I now recognize our Ranking Member for his 
opening statement.
    Mr. Raskin. Thank you kindly, Mr. Chair. Welcome to our 
witnesses.
    I imagine that in a hearing about threats to freedom of 
speech abroad, we might hear from a Russian dissident about 
Putin's massive violations of political freedom, or the death 
of Alexei Navalny in prison, or perhaps a Chinese prodemocracy 
activist about President Xi's attacks on free speech in Hong 
Kong, Tibet, Xinjiang, or the persecution trial of Jimmy Lai, 
or maybe a journalist about the Saudi Crown Prince's 
assassination of Jamal Khashoggi, the Washington Post writer 
who demanded freedom from religious persecution and oppression 
in Saudi Arabia, but no. The dictators of the world have got 
nothing to fear from this hearing.
    The Republicans called it to attack our democratic allies 
in Europe. The star witness is not a human rights leader, like 
Navalny, but a far-Right pro-Putin politician who leads the 
U.K. Reform Party, a party that is four Members out of 650 
Members in the Parliament. He calls England an authoritarian 
regime while saying that Vladimir Putin is the world leader he 
admires the most.
    Well, this hearing mimics Vice President J.D. Vance, who 
went to the Munich Security Conference in February, in the 
first two minutes of his speech, whitewashed the world's 
leading autocratic regimes proclaiming that the threat that 
worries him is not Russia; it's not China, he said, ``but 
rather it's our European allies.'' Amazing.
    Republicans are promoting far-Right parties in Europe like 
Alternative for Deutschland, Reform U.K., and Rassemblement 
National Francaise, and ignoring massive repression in Russia, 
China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and among all the autocrats of 
the world, Republicans are vilifying European liberal 
democracies simply for engaging in the line-drawing exercises 
that we Americans engage in under our First Amendment with 
respect to the epidemic of child pornography, protecting 
children from other harmful content, defamatory speech, online 
scams and false advertising, and speech inciting riots and 
imminent lawless action, all forms of speech that the First 
Amendment does not protect, and these tricky contours must 
still be drawn by law.
    We could have a meaningful hearing on this complicated 
subject, but this hearing is just a drive-by hit against a 
strong democratic ally to benefit a Donald Trump sycophant and 
wannabe.
    It's even worse than this. Not only are our colleagues 
ignoring intensifying repression in the world's dictatorships; 
they're also trying to distract the world from the attack on 
freedom taking place right here in America every single day. 
Americans aren't worried about the EU or the Online Safety Act 
in the U.K. We're not worried about White nationalists not 
having enough license to incite lynch mobs to set immigrants on 
fire in their bedrooms. The Americans are worried that Donald 
Trump is working to rewrite and whitewash American history in 
our museums, our textbooks, and our National Parks, to destroy 
PBS, NPR, and public broadcasting, to ban books in our 
libraries, and to censor any news stories critical of him by 
installing political henchmen in private broadcast rooms.
    The Americans know that academic freedom is in danger when 
the administration cancels and withholds billions of dollars in 
scientific and medical research funding from American 
universities, even for urgent, lifesaving studies about breast 
cancer or heart attacks as a way to force schools to impose 
government orthodoxy on curriculum, hiring, admissions, and any 
student and faculty speech that MAGA considers politically 
incorrect.
    The Americans see Trump trying to harass, intimidate, 
control, and shut down the press, like ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, and 
PBS. The Republican-controlled FCC essentially blackmailed 
media companies Skydance and Paramount into agreeing to install 
a spy, a monitor, a minder, I think the Brits might say, to 
police CBS News programs to make sure that they are being 
sufficiently Trumpy in giving us the news to get approval of a 
merger from FCC.
    Meanwhile, Trump sued ``60 Minutes'' and CBS personally for 
$20 billion for the frivolous cause of action that he thought 
an interview with Kamala Harris was edited too favorably and 
then walked away with a cool $16 million in a shakedown 
settlement for his library, all part of a now familiar pattern. 
When Trump doesn't like the news, he sues the broadcaster and 
unleashes the FCC on them until they pay up and agree to a 
government spy stationed in their office.
    Free speech is so much in danger in the U.S. today that, if 
the government tries to violate our rights, we might not even 
be able to find a lawyer to defend ourselves because Trump is 
systematically exacting retribution against law firms that 
represent anyone on the other side of a case against him.
    Look. Our country loves free speech. We fight for free 
speech. We fought for free speech, and we know it's in danger 
when students who are lawfully in the United States are taken 
off the street and arrested without warrants by masked Federal 
agents in unmarked cars for writing an article or attending a 
rally that Stephen Miller doesn't like.
    Free speech is in danger when visitors to our country have 
their social media accounts screened at the border for any 
criticism of Donald Trump.
    Free speech is in danger when ``To Kill a Mockingbird,'' 
``The Handmaid's Tale,'' ``1984,'' and ``The Kite Runner'' are 
banned from our schools and libraries across the country, and 
even families defending our freedom abroad have to fight for 
their kids' right to read freely in public schools run by the 
Department of Defense.
    Freedoms are in danger when the administration tramples the 
civil service rights of hundreds of thousands of nonpartisan 
expert civil servants. Civil servants have been protected 
against political discrimination for more than a century to 
maintain the excellence and independence of our Federal 
workforce, but they're now being fired simply for doing their 
jobs, like prosecuting violent criminals and insurrectionists 
who try to overthrow our government and attack our police 
officers, or because they honestly gave honest economic 
information in labor statistics to the public.
    These honorable civil servants are being fired because they 
won't be the political hacks Trump demands that they be. When 
private comments made by Federal employees are scrutinized for 
anti-Trump bias and they can lose their jobs because of it, 
then we've entered the realm--not just of Vladimir Putin but of 
Joseph Stalin.
    Now, Mr. Trump and Mr. Farage both claim they're protecters 
of free speech, but they only want to protect speech they agree 
with. In the U.K., Mr. Farage is openly promoting the abolition 
of The Human Rights Act of 1998 to be replaced with a British 
Bill of Rights that limits the right of free speech to British 
citizens and legally sanctioned residents. He complains that 
racist threats against immigrants are not protected free speech 
while he proposes to strip migrants, tourists, and perhaps even 
visiting American Congresspeople of any free speech rights at 
all. I had my own close encounter with that when Mr. Farage and 
his team presented for more than an hour in a conversation we 
had about free speech, and after three minutes of talking, he 
cut me off and terminated the meeting because he didn't like 
what I was saying. That's the kind of free speech he's 
committed to.
    There is a free speech crisis in America today, but there's 
no free speech crisis in Britain. The U.K. Prime Minister Keir 
Starmer has not shut down GB News where Mr. Farage has his own 
show just because Mr. Farage has used his airtime to call for 
banning peaceful protests that he disagrees with. No one has 
stopped him from going on Russian TV 17 times and saying also 
and repeating that the one world political leader he most 
admired was Vladimir Putin, even though Vladimir Putin is a war 
criminal and a dictator who has regularly interfered in other 
countries' democratic elections.
    No one has stopped Mr. Farage from parroting Putin's absurd 
talking points like when Farage claimed that NATO, the U.S., 
and Britain provoked this war in Ukraine. For a man who 
fashions himself as a free speech martyr, Mr. Farage seems most 
at home with the autocrats and dictators of the world who are 
crushing freedom on Earth.
    Mr. Farage wants to get rid of the Online Safety Act in his 
country, a law shepherded by the Conservative Party and 
implemented by the Labour Party, which bans child pornography 
online, protects children from harmful content, forbids 
nonconsensual pornography, and other unlawful content. He 
should go and advance the positions he's taking here in 
Congress today in Parliament, which is meeting today, if he's 
serious about it.
    To the people of U.K. who think this Putin-loving free 
speech imposter and Trump's sycophant will protect freedom in 
your country, come on over to America and see what Trump and 
MAGA are doing to destroy our freedom, kidnap college students 
off the street, ban books from our libraries, militarize our 
police and unleash them against our communities, take over our 
universities, wreck our professional civil service, and turn 
the government into a money-making machine for Trump and his 
family. You might think twice before you let Mr. Farage make 
Britain great again.
    I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back.
    I would just point out that the encounter that the Ranking 
Member had with Mr. Farage was a little different in my 
recollection than how it was described. I would also point out 
that the gentleman alleges there's no free speech in America 
under President Trump while his staff member is holding up 
countless number of articles criticizing the Trump 
Administration. I think that's a little bit of a--well. Let's 
say that's not how I think it actually goes.
    We now will introduce today's witnesses.
    We will start with The Right Honorable Nigel Farage. Mr. 
Farage is a Member of Parliament from Clacton and the leader of 
the Reform U.K. Party. He is also a television host and was a 
leading proponent of the Brexit campaign.
    Mr. Lorcan Price is an attorney with the ADF International, 
a nonprofit organization that works to protect religious 
freedom, free speech, parental rights, and the sanctity of 
life. Before joining ADF International, he was an attorney in 
Ireland.
    Mr. Morgan Reed is the President of The App Association, a 
trade association comprised of app developers and connected 
device manufacturers. He routinely testifies before Congress on 
matters of interest to his Members, including artificial 
intelligence, competition, and other issues.
    We have Professor David Kaye. Mr. Kaye is a Clinical 
Professor of Law at the UC Irvine School of Law. Professor Kaye 
previously served as the United States Special Rapporteur on 
the Promotion and Protection of the Right to Freedom of Opinion 
and Expression. We welcome our witnesses and thank them for 
appearing today.
    We will begin by swearing you in. Would you all please rise 
and raise your right hand.
    Do you swear or affirm under penalty of perjury that the 
testimony you're about to give is true and correct to the best 
of your knowledge, information, and belief, so help you God?
    Let the record show that each of the witnesses answered in 
the affirmative. You can--thank you. Please be seated.
    Please know that your written testimony will be entered 
into the record in its entirety. Accordingly, we ask that you 
summarize your testimony in five minutes. I think we'll just go 
down the line, and we will start with Mr. Reed, then Mr. Price, 
Mr. Farage, and then Professor Kaye.
    So, Mr. Reed, you're recognized, five minutes.

                    STATEMENT OF MORGAN REED

    Mr. Reed. My name is Morgan Reed, and I'm the President of 
ACT | The App Association. Our members are small- and medium-
sized tech companies from your districts and around the world. 
We build and sell the apps on the products you love. If you're 
scheduling a haircut, tracking your productivity at work, or 
using online tools to train your employees, it's likely one of 
my members made that happen.
    I'm here to tell you that our European members are just as 
good, just as smart, and just as entrepreneurial as our 
American members. Whether it's Clement Sauvage in France, 
Mitchel Volkering in The Netherlands, or Mark Thomas in the 
U.K., their companies are busy trying to change the world.
    The difference between them and our American members can be 
seen in the ever-growing wall of ex ante regulation and 
compliance requirements from the EU government that is 
constantly asking how government can be more involved rather 
than less.
    Unfortunately, the DMA is a perfect encapsulation of the 
problem. Ostensibly, it exists to make it easier for EU 
companies to compete with the U.S. tech lead. Instead, it just 
creates leadership and red tape. Small companies find value in 
the bigger platforms for three boring and absolutely vital 
reasons: They need to offload overhead, have access to a global 
market, and have customer trust.
    Because small businesses are always overworked and 
undermanned, for us, offloading overhead is critical. A small 
business is trying to ship a product, not learning about tax 
laws in 160 countries. We don't want to sign multiple contracts 
with middlemen to handle shipping or web storage or send bills 
to dozens of different platforms, each with their own P.O. 
system. Small businesses need to focus their time on serving 
the customer to compete.
    Of course, to grow your small business, you need customers, 
and that means access to a global market. If your product has 
fewer than 100 customers in your State, that's a hobby, but to 
100,000 customers worldwide, that's a business. Nearly every 
one of the DMA's designated gatekeepers are actually gateways 
to a global market. You might say, ``Morgan, the internet 
itself is a global market.'' We would agree, but the internet 
lacks one key characteristic: Trust.
    Today, many of us take for granted the measures of keeping 
malware and other harmful content off our devices and off our 
shopping sites. DMA threatens to change this by forcing 
companies to roll out the red carpet for bad actors. As a 
result, consumers will rationally steer away from startups and 
small developers they've never heard of and toward larger, more 
established rivals that spend millions on marketing and buy 
Super Bowl ads to build their brand.
    Don't forget who's pushing the DMA. It's companies like 
Spotify, Yelp, Duck Duck Go, companies you've heard of. Just in 
case you think I'm exaggerating, the first business to take 
advantage of the DMA's requirements wasn't some brilliant 
startup being kept down by Big Tech. It was an app called Hot 
Tub, a porn aggregator that can now be sideloaded and could 
even operate without parental controls.
    This is the most damaging aspect of the DMA. By forcing the 
gatekeepers to remove features or capabilities that would keep 
bad actors off your smart phone and out of your wallet, the DMA 
demands the world adopt a flea market model, where anybody with 
a plastic folding table and some boxes that fell off the back 
of the truck are given the same access to consumers as 
legitimate businesses.
    For small businesses, we want platforms to provide us with 
ever-improving tools, features, and pricing models to make it 
attractive. We don't love the big platforms. We do business 
with them. Without our products, their platforms aren't worth 
very much. Without their tools, our overhead goes up, our speed 
goes down, and trust goes out the window.
    If we have any ask of the platforms, it's for them to do 
more, not less. We want them to do more to reduce overhead, 
more to protect our intellectual property, and do more to 
maintain those trust relationships.
    Into this relatively straightforward business arrangement, 
Europe has injected regulatory walls like the Digital Markets 
Act, the Digital Services Act, the Online Safety Act, our old 
friend GDPR, and the newest addition, the AI Act. These laws 
aren't there to lower friction. They are, as Teresa Ribera at 
the European Commission puts it, ``focused on creating a 
culture of compliance.'' That's a quote.
    While an ever-thickening wall of overlapping regulations is 
exactly what compliance lawyers want, it's not what innovators 
want. It's not what small businesses want. It's not what 
customers want.
    We ask you to reject the European regulatory culture and 
instead focus on a culture of opportunity and innovation. Small 
businesses never succeed if we can't beat the red tape.
    Thank you very much for your time, and I look forward to 
your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Reed follows:]
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    Chair Jordan. Thank you, Mr. Reed.
    Mr. Price, you're recognized for five minutes.

                   STATEMENT OF LORCAN PRICE

    Mr. Price. Thank you. Thank you very much. Good morning, 
Chair Jordan, Ranking Member Raskin, and the distinguished 
Members of the Committee, ladies and gentlemen. My name is 
Lorcan Price. I am a barrister and legal counsel for ADF 
International. I'm very happy to come here today to speak to 
you about the perilous situation for freedom of expression in 
Europe and why it matters for Americans. I do this on the basis 
of my experience litigating in speech and religious liberty 
cases before the European Court of Human Rights.
    However, today, principally, I wish to address the Digital 
Services Act of the European Union. Before I do that, I'd like 
to set the scene briefly by telling you how bad things have 
become in Europe and the United Kingdom, and very much building 
on the remarks of the Chair because, when I met some Members of 
the Committee in Europe recently, I think that there was a 
genuine element of surprise and disbelief about the state of 
affairs in Europe. I'll give you some examples.
    In Finland, our client Paivi Rasanen, a Member of 
Parliament, is now in year five of a prosecution for simply 
posting a verse from scripture on Twitter. Our client Rose 
Docherty in Scotland, a 74-year-old grandmother, was arrested 
for offering to have consensual conversations with people. Adam 
Smith-Connor, an army veteran, was prosecuted for praying 
silently in his head in England.
    Just yesterday, you would have seen that the U.K. police 
arrested a comedian and fellow Irishman, Graham Linehan, a 
person I know well, for tweets about gender ideology. German 
pensioners are having their homes raided and are being 
prosecuted for insulting politicians. Indeed, one member of The 
Green Party in Germany has over 700 criminal complaints 
outstanding for insult.
    What's happened in Europe is, as Vice President Vance said 
on St. Valentine's Day in Munich, ``a serious retreat from a 
fundamental value, that of free speech.'' It's a sign that our 
European political elite has lost control of the narrative, and 
the Digital Services Act is the response to that, an 
increasingly desperate attempt to suppress growing public 
discontent.
    Why should this matter for Americans? Why should you be 
concerned? Because of the worldwide reach of European law, the 
so-called Brussels effect changes regulation in every area that 
the European Union chooses to regulate. Now, they have entered 
the business of regulating speech. They're very proud of the 
so-called Brussels effect when you ask them about it.
    This new EU law is essentially an antispeech law. When you 
read the case law of the European Court of Justice, statements 
from senior officials, and the provisions of the Digital 
Services Act, you can see everything is there to create a 
digital censorship industrial complex. We see a whole structure 
of trusted flaggers, codes of conduct on so-called hate speech 
and misinformation, content moderation for so-called systemic 
risks. Much of this is hidden in bland technocratic language in 
the DSA, and our written submissions go into some of the 
problems associated with it. It constitutes nothing more than 
an attempt to bring Brussels regulation of speech onto a global 
stage.
    Furthermore, when the European Union is now negotiating 
trade deals, including with your neighbors to the North in 
Canada, they insist that the Digital Services Act is part of 
that. It's very clearly a global intent. It means that the 
European Union will set the global standard when it comes to 
speech. Because of the laws that I just outlined in Europe, the 
type of prosecutions we're seeing, it's an extremely low 
standard.
    It draws, I would suggest to you, a digital curtain where 
once there was an iron curtain. The U.S. companies bear the 
brunt disproportionately of this. They're hijacked by the DSA 
to become essentially the EU's global censorship police whether 
they like it or not. The DSA contains expansive powers of 
investigation, huge compliance costs, and crippling fines if 
they're fined to be noncompliant for removing so-called illegal 
content.
    Indeed, I commend your Committee's report recently on 
showing the bias at the heart of the system.
    As we speak, companies are having to make a decision, an 
invidious decision, between whether or not they defend German 
pensioners criticizing politicians or they comply with the 
European Commission and with national laws.
    We know from COVID censorship which is the most likely 
route they take. Compliance is easier and cheaper, but it is 
not good for speech. Indeed, yesterday I was just informed by a 
senior lawyer for a major U.S. company that the Germans are 
prosecuting a 14-year-old boy for mild online post. They want 
the identity of another post outside Germany, and they've 
launched criminal proceedings against U.S. employees of this 
company for refusing to pass over the identity information.
    That's the attitude we're dealing with. We've seen it from 
Thierry Breton, from others in the European Commission. They 
want censorship power, and they want it globally.
    The digital square is one of the great gifts from the 
United States to the world. It has been transformative for our 
political discussion. The EU wants to make itself the sheriff 
of the square, and it's armed itself with powerful tools. There 
are more to come, unfortunately, including the democracy 
shield.
    I agree with Ranking Member Raskin that it is sad when 
close allies and democracies do this kind of thing, and we must 
call them out for it. We must take a stand against this new 
censorship wave. Democracy requires free speech. I'm looking 
forward to our discussion and any questions you may have.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Price follows:]
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    Chair Jordan. Thank you, Mr. Price. The Right Honorable 
Member of Parliament, Mr. Farage, is recognized.

               STATEMENT OF THE HON. NIGEL FARAGE

    Mr. Farage. Well, thank you very much indeed. Good morning, 
everybody. Thank you, Chair Jordan, for inviting me here today. 
It turns out with news over the last 48 hours to have been 
really rather timely.
    I'm delighted to reacquaint with the charming Mr. Raskin. 
Delightful testimony you gave me earlier on with your speech. 
Hey, that's fine. You can say what you like. I don't care. 
Because that's what free speech is.
    In a sense, this has all been going wrong now for a couple 
of decades. We've kind of forgotten the Voltairian principles 
that we'll fight and defend to the death your right to say 
something that we fundamentally disagree with. That is the 
absolute foundation, if you think about it, free speech, 
democracy, and living in freedom. It's why we fought two World 
Wars at massive, massive cost, to defend that very principle 
for ourselves and for many, many others around the country.
    I first became worried about all this with cancel culture, 
the idea that we can't have this speaker go to university 
because some people might be offended by what he or she have to 
say.
    It is important to note that there is not a parent in the 
United Kingdom--and I would guess it's the same for America 
too--that is not concerned about content their children, as 
minors, can find on the internet. Not a single parent that is 
not concerned about this. At the moment, we're not finding the 
right solutions.
    I did myself begin to think that hardware might be one of 
the solutions; those laptops and headsets could be programmed 
so that many, many apps and many, many services are simply 
unavailable from these devices. What we've done is to go down 
the legislative route. It's extraordinary that I come from a 
land of Magna Carta. I come from a land that gave us the mother 
of parliaments. It doesn't give me any great joy to be sitting 
in America and describing the really awful authoritarian 
situation that we have now sunk into.
    J.D. Vance did us all a service at the Munich Security 
Conference back in February of this year. He really got this 
debate up and running. It's a vital one. We've run on since 
then. The Online Safety Act was put in place by the last 
Conservative government. I don't doubt for a minute their good 
intentions, but sometimes the road to hell is paved with those 
good intentions. We are now where we are.
    We have a couple of very famous cases. We, of course, have 
Lucy Connolly, who put out an intemperate tweet after the 
savage murder of those three beautiful young girls; she 
herself, a mother who had lost a child. It was intemperate. It 
was wrong. She removed it 3\1/2\ hours later. Sentenced to 31 
months in prison. She's now out, having served 40 percent of 
the time. I wanted to bring her with me today as living proof 
of what can go wrong. Sadly, the restrictions that have been 
put on her banned her from making the trip, which is a very, 
very great shame.
    We, of course, have the extraordinary events that we 
understood yesterday of Graham Linehan, the comedy writer, 
comedic writer, and he put out some tweets months ago when he 
was in Arizona. Months later, he arrives at Heathrow Airport to 
be met by five armed police. Armed police, not a big deal in 
the USA. A very big deal in the United Kingdom. Five of them. 
He was arrested and taken away for questioning. He's not even a 
British citizen. He's an Irish citizen.
    This could happen to any American man or woman that goes to 
Heathrow that has said things online that the British 
Government and British police don't like. It is a potentially 
big threat to tech bosses, to many, many others.
    This legislation we've got will damage trade between our 
countries, threaten free speech across the West because of the 
knock-on roll out effects of this legislation from us, or from 
the European Union. I've come today as well to be a klaxon, to 
say to you, ``Don't allow piece by piece this to happen here in 
America.'' You will be doing us and yourselves and all freedom-
loving people a favor if your politicians and your businesses 
say to the British Government, ``You've simply got this 
wrong.''
    At what point do we become North Korea? Well, I think the 
Irish comedy writer found that out two days ago at Heathrow 
Airport. This is a genuinely worrying, concerning, and shocking 
situation. I thank you for the opportunity to come here today.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Farage follows:]
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    Chair Jordan. Well said. Thank you, Mr. Farage. Professor 
Kaye, you're recognized for five minutes.

                    STATEMENT OF DAVID KAYE

    Mr. Kaye. Chair Jordan, Ranking Member Raskin, and the 
Members of the Committee, thank you for the invitation to 
appear before you. I ask that my written statement be entered 
into the record.
    My name is David Kaye. I'm a law professor at the 
University of California Irvine where I research and teach 
international law.
    I know something about censorship. From 2014-2020, I was 
the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Opinion and 
Expression. In that role, I monitored a growing global assault 
on free speech, among other things. I led a landmark effort to 
call out China's attacks on civil society. I detailed 
repression of media and criticism in Putin's Russia. I 
condemned Iran's suppression of dissent. I even criticized 
democratic governments when they sought to force platforms to 
take down lawful speech.
    That is censorship, violations of the human right to seek, 
receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds 
guaranteed by Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil 
and Political Rights, a treaty ratified by the United States in 
1992. Inspired by the First Amendment, it guarantees a 
speaker's rights and the rights of everyone to access 
information.
    It pains me that the United States, the country that had my 
back as special rapporteur, the land of the First Amendment's 
Make No Law, now leads the charge to undermine freedom of 
speech and of the press. The threat is real, live, and shocking 
given our Nation's historic commitments.
    The administration follows a well-worn path. A few 
examples:
    The silencing of scientists and public health officials. 
Just last week, the head of the CDC was fired because she would 
not agree to change her conclusions about vaccines. The 
administration has scrubbed websites that doctors and parents 
use to make decisions.
    Censoring and punishing speech of visitors. In visa 
interviews and at the border, there are increasing reports of 
officers screening visitors according to their social media 
activity or detaining and deporting based on speech and op-eds.
    The repeated assaults on the media as we've seen attacks on 
public broadcasting, frivolous lawsuits against media outlets, 
and the defamation of Voice of America.
    This is the tip of an iceberg of censorship that should 
concern this Committee and every American. Yet, U.S. officials 
who claim to be free speech warriors are spending their time 
looking abroad.
    Now, I know nobody who argues that EU and British laws on 
speech are perfect. Still, the EU Digital Services Act and the 
U.K. Online Safety Act respond to problems both sides of the 
aisle in Congress have found serious but have yet to address: 
The enormous, opaque, and unaccountable power of a small number 
of massive tech companies over our information environments.
    The EU answered the question of massive platform power not 
by claiming new powers to take down content or accounts. It 
adopted new rules to empower users, including by requiring 
notice and an opportunity to appeal content moderation 
decisions.
    The Online Safety Act championed by Labour and Conservative 
Parties was widely popular as an attempt to hold Big Tech 
accountable. It does have elements that concern me. Whatever 
faults it might have, it, like any other British law, is 
subject to legal challenge and review by courts for any 
violation of fundamental rights just as we would expect of any 
democracy. Neither establish censorship regimes.
    I encourage the Members of this Committee to consider two 
things.
    First, instead of criticizing ally democracies, consider 
the kinds of content online that you find objectionable. Maybe 
it's antisemitic or Islamophobic content; misogyny; child 
endangerment; and content glorifying terrorism or inciting 
violence. How do you propose to address those in a way that is 
consistent with free speech values? That's not an easy 
question. It can't be waved away with just three words, 
``because free speech.'' The EU and the U.K. have made their 
choices, subject to democratic judicial oversight and acting in 
good faith, I think this Committee could do the same.
    Second, this Committee has the obligation to protect 
Americans' freedom of expression here at home. The 
administration is putting freedom of expression under direct 
attack, and oversight and constraint from this Committee would 
make quite a bit of sense. That, I would respectfully submit, 
is the real threat to American speech and innovation. I look 
forward to your questions. Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Kaye follows:]
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    Chair Jordan. Thank you, Professor.
    We'll now proceed under the five-minute rule. The Chair now 
recognizes the Chair of the Subcommittee, Mr. Fitzgerald.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Thank you, Chair Jordan.
    Well, one of the things we found out on our trip through 
Europe was that the U.S. innovates, China duplicates, and now 
the EU regulates.
    Mr. Reed, I have a question for you first. Reports estimate 
that complying with the EU's Digital Markets Act, the DMA, 
could cost American companies up to a billion dollars every 
single year. That is not just a number on a page. Those costs 
ultimately fall on American workers, who will see fewer jobs; 
on consumers, who will face higher prices and fewer choices; 
and on entrepreneurs, who will have a harder time competing 
against subsidized foreign rivals.
    Mr. Reed, is it correct that these compliance costs affect 
our economy? What does it mean for America if Europe is allowed 
to impose these kind of costs on U.S. innovation?
    Mr. Reed. The short answer is yes. Absolutely.
    The more detailed answer is that unfortunately Europe has 
taken an ex ante approach to regulation. The United States has 
always done well with an ex post. As a small business 
entrepreneur, I actually want fraud to be gone after. I want 
deceptive practices to be reduced. Unfortunately, what we see 
in the EU is an ex ante process that ups my compliance 
requirements without actually giving customers the certainty of 
the result.
    It's absolutely raising costs. For American developers, we 
see one of the largest problems is how do you get to those 
European customers if the first tranche you hit is paying a 
compliance lawyer to meet all these tests.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Thank you.
    Mr. Price, our Federal Trade Commission Chair Ferguson has 
warned that government regulation can stifle, obviously, 
competition and innovation, and in many cases, the government 
itself becomes the most dangerous of all the monopolies. Isn't 
it the DMA--is the DMA a perfect example of that? It is 
weaponizes and makes it burdensome with regulations. Can you 
give me your comments on the DMA? What do you think is the 
status right now?
    Mr. Price. Certainly, agree that European regulation 
generally slows down competition. It creates a situation 
whereby companies are unable to innovate with any degree of 
speed because they're constantly looking over their shoulder 
toward regulators around compliance. DMA, very good example of 
that. Not just the DMA. Of course, you have the General Data 
Protection Regulation, GDPR. You have the DSA, the Digital 
Services Act, and constantly more and more being added. It's 
been estimated, in the digital market space alone, since 2016--
30 pages of regulation existed at the time. We're now over 
1,000 and growing.
    The European Union's response to American innovation is 
more and more regulation, generally around nebulous concepts 
like safetyism and protecting consumers, but very often just, 
particularly with the DSA, to create, unfortunately, a 
censorship industrial complex, as I outlined. DMA, very good 
example of that as well.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Thank you very much.
    Mr. Reed, if I can come back to you. President Trump just 
secured a landmark commitment from the EU to address 
unjustified digital trade barriers. It was part of the U.S.-EU 
trade deal. I'm hopeful that this will result in the EU kind of 
removing--and a lot of people we talked to in Europe when we 
were there said that there was a possibility that they could 
pull back on some of this.
    What action could President Trump take to hold the EU 
accountable to their commitment? Are there additional 
enforcement tools that Congress could provide to make that 
happen?
    Mr. Reed. Well, Congressman Fitzgerald, you've done great 
work in reaching out and sending letters to make it clear what 
the position of the U.S. Government is on these issues. The 
reality is that the Europeans themselves, through the Draghi 
Report, are recognizing that they have done a lot to harm those 
very same industries. We're hopeful that the United States can 
continue to use the careful power and the careful discussions 
through our trade negotiations and other actions to get them to 
step back.
    We're here to talk about free speech. One of the things I 
would point out is we want the small businesses in Europe to 
also be able to speak and say, ``Hey, we need these regulations 
pulled back.''
    Mr. Fitzgerald. So, just to followup to that, then, as 
well. A 2024 Staff Report by the Housing Oversight Committee 
found that FTC Chair Lina Khan was using taxpayer dollars to 
send agency, quote, ``liaisons to the EU to assist with the 
implementation of the Digital Markets Act.''
    Mr. Reed, do you think it's appropriate for that to have a 
consultation or for the use of taxpayer dollars to help a 
foreign country implement laws that unfairly discriminate 
against U.S. companies?
    Mr. Reed. Well, we don't think taxpayer dollars should ever 
be used to unfairly discriminate against United States 
companies. We're hopeful that U.S. taxpayer dollars can be used 
to ensure open markets around the world and a safe environment 
for our entrepreneurs to succeed.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Thank you, Chair. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The Chair now 
recognizes the Chair of the--Ranking Member of the 
Subcommittee, gentleman who made a big announcement this week 
we're sorry to hear about, but we appreciate your service. You 
are recognized for five minutes.
    Mr. Nadler. Thank you.
    Mr. Chair, there is a clear and present danger to free 
speech in America, but it is not across the Atlantic Ocean. It 
is right here in Washington sitting in the Oval Office. At a 
time when the greatest threat to the First Amendment rights of 
Americans resides in the White House, our Republican colleagues 
have brought us here today to talk about Europe. They've 
invited a fringe politician from the United Kingdom to attack 
the laws regulating certain conduct online in his country and 
the European Union, laws that are intended to combat 
disinformation by hostile foreign actors, hate speech, and 
other fraudulent or criminal conduct.
    They have sounded the alarms about these foreign laws. When 
it comes to the Trump Administration suppression of speech in 
this country, Republicans are curiously and dangerously silent. 
There is actually no corner of society Donald Trump and his 
administration have left untouched by their effort to impose 
their radical views on the American people and to stamp out 
dissent.
    Since taking office, President Trump and Members of his 
administration have used the powers of the Executive Branch in 
their attempt to silence their political opponents by attacking 
our core democratic institutions, such as academia, the legal 
profession, and journalism. These are moves straight out of the 
authoritarian playbook.
    For example, the Trump Administration has taken aim at 
colleges and universities trying to bend them to its will by 
withholding billions of dollars in scientific research funding, 
a shortsighted move that will set back innovation in this 
country by decades. In some cases, including at my alma mater 
of Columbia, it has demanded onerous conditions that infringe 
our academic freedom.
    On these same college campuses, students are being 
kidnapped for writing op-eds, and others are being deported for 
participating in protests.
    The Trump Administration has also targeted disfavored law 
firms that dare to challenge the President or to hold him 
accountable or simply for hiring an attorney who clashed with 
Trump in the past, some have said capitulated to its campaign 
of extortion.
    The President has even taken aim at the arts and 
humanities, launching a hostile takeover of the Kennedy Center 
and censoring exhibits at the Smithsonian Institution, 
attempting to whitewash American history and to stamp out free 
expression.
    He has also engaged in a dangerous campaign of harassment 
and intimidation on the media. For example, last October, he 
sued CBS for $10 billion for editing a ``60 Minutes'' interview 
with Kamala Harris in a way he didn't like.
    Although the suit is widely ridiculed by First Amendment 
attorneys who called it meritless and absurd, Paramount, the 
parent company of CBS News, was desperate to win approval from 
the Trump-controlled FCC for its proposed multibillion dollar 
merger and felt pressure to settle this baseless lawsuit. 
Ultimately, paid $16 million to settle the suit. Just days 
later, the FCC approved the merger. What a coincidence.
    This followed NBC settling on a similar baseless Trump 
lawsuit for $15 million because of corporate pressure. Now, The 
Wall Street Journal and Rupert Murdoch face their own $10 
billion lawsuits from Donald Trump over the journal's reporting 
that shed new light on Trump's well-documented relationship 
with Jeffrey Epstein.
    I am not aware of any President in the past suing media 
companies or newspapers or television stations for free 
expression they didn't like.
    Professor Kaye, the free press is essential to our 
democracy and the rule of law. Can you explain how President 
Trump's attacks on the news media and his attempts to sue them 
into silence impact freedom of expression and freedom of speech 
in this country?
    Mr. Kaye. Yes. Thank you, Mr. Nadler. Congratulations on 
your announcement this week.
    Well, I think it's important to note that, when we're 
talking about attacks on the press, it's not just about attacks 
on the journalists themselves or the media outlets themselves. 
It's about every American's right of accessed information. It's 
about the freedom of public debate that we get from a media 
that isn't intimidated either by suit or by criticism from the 
Oval Office, or whatever it might be. It's really important to 
think about these kinds of attacks, not only as those on 
journalists but on the entire information ecosystem.
    It's also important for us to realize that we can't pick 
and choose what censorship we like and don't like. The Chair's 
statement was really correct when he said censorship used by 
people in power to censor critics, and that's at the core. We 
should be examining where do we see that. We tend to see that 
quite a bit in this country in an unprecedented way.
    Mr. Nadler. In your testimony, you identified a number of 
threats to freedom of expression in the United States, 
including science and public health. It's also been reported 
that the government has a list of hundreds of words, ranging 
from issues related to climate change to diversity, equity, and 
inclusion, that it essentially has banned from government 
websites and uses to make funding decisions. Is this true?
    Mr. Kaye. I have seen those reports, and I understand that 
to be true as well, particularly the use of lists of words 
essentially to censor research that would be conducted by 
scientists at universities and at national academies in the 
United States.
    Mr. Nadler. Thank you. My time has expired. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The Ranking Member 
is recognized for unanimous consent, I understand.
    Mr. Raskin. Yes. Thank you, Mr. Chair. This is a Minority 
fact sheet about the Majority's report on the Digital Services 
Act.
    Chair Jordan. We'll look forward to reading that. Without 
objection.
    Mr. Nadler. Mr. Chair, I have a unanimous--
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman from New York is recognized for 
unanimous consent.
    Mr. Nadler. Mr. Chair, I have a unanimous consent request. 
I ask unanimous consent to enter into the record an article, 
published by Reuters on October 29, 2024, titled, ``Fact Check: 
U.K. woman jailed for inciting racial hatred, not posting 
hurtful words,'' which confirms that Lucy Connolly pled guilty 
to inciting racial hatred and was not, as claimed in deceptive 
social media posts, punished merely for posting, quote, ``edgy 
words on the internet.''
    Chair Jordan. Without objection. I'm sure it will be 
comments about that later.
    Mr. Nadler. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman from California is recognized 
for five minutes.
    Mr. Issa. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Professor Kaye, being a fellow Californian, I'm sure you're 
aware of and could correct the Ranking Member that our own 
Governor has sued Fox for $787 million. Isn't that correct?
    Mr. Kaye. I'm not familiar with that.
    Mr. Issa. Well, I didn't think you would be, but neither 
was the Ranking Member, apparently.
    Mr. Farage, do you have the equivalent of what the 
Professor Kaye was talking about, which is the Article 19? 
You're a signator to that international convention, if you 
will, on free speech. Do you feel that it is being observed in 
the U.K.?
    Mr. Farage. We may be a signatory to it--and we may--and 
the Prime Minister today in the House of Commons, was talking 
about free speech. Indeed, when President Trump--I was with him 
in Scotland the other day. He talked about our proud history of 
free speech. What people say and what they do are two very 
different things. The argument is that the Online Safety Act--
I'll repeat what I said earlier--may have been designed by the 
Tories with the best of intentions, but it's turned out to be 
the sledgehammer that misses the nut. It's not protecting kids. 
It is damaging--
    Mr. Issa. Going back to United States, you don't have a 
constitutional framework that is the equivalent of ours in that 
you have no First Amendment absolute guarantee. Is that 
correct?
    Mr. Farage. It is correct. Our Constitution isn't in 
written form. It's based on common law that's evolved and 
adapted over centuries, and your Founding Fathers. The best 
bits--
    Mr. Issa. It appears in Europe and in the U.K., free speech 
is whatever the bloody members think it is at a given time, and 
it changes with the will of the people they elect. Is that 
right?
    Mr. Farage. Yes. I don't think at any point we've really 
had a proper debate about infringement of free speech until 
COVID. I think COVID changed the game.
    Mr. Issa. OK.
    Mr. Farage. The government, social media platforms, and Big 
Media, suddenly there were arguments that needed to be made 
that were banned.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Mr. Reed, to your knowledge--and I would go 
to the professor, but he seems to be ill-informed even on our 
own Governor's lawsuits. First Amendment--in the United States, 
you can sue for anything. Do you often win if you sue against 
institutions like Fox? Wall Street Journal? Isn't it true that 
effectively the First Amendment creates a tremendous shield 
against anything except malicious and deliberate lies?
    Mr. Reed. Not my area of expertise. We can absolutely talk 
about apps. As an American, yes, that is absolutely my 
understanding.
    Mr. Issa. OK. You have no such protection--just the 
opposite. You have no idea in Europe or in Britain about what 
is going to be allowed or not allowed--in other words, you 
don't know where to call balls and strikes. You just simply 
have to pay the fines when you get to them.
    Mr. Reed. Well, I only carry one passport. I am more aware 
of the American laws. That is my understanding. Correct.
    Mr. Issa. OK. Now, we do have a First Amendment, and we are 
a signator to Article 19. I'm going to draft--I'm going to go a 
little bit into opinion. Now, I'm the author of ``No Censorship 
on Our Shores,'' meaning--Mr. Price, I know you're familiar 
with it. I'm not going to tolerate censorship overseas and then 
have those people come to United States. Now, Professor Kaye 
may object to the idea that I'm not going to let people who 
have been involved in censorship come into the United States 
because it's unacceptable to get away with that overseas.
    Let's be reciprocal for a moment, for Mr. Reed and for 
everyone. If we're seeing Europe and the U.K. and other 
countries stifle what we are guaranteed in the U.S., and 
particularly arrest somebody for what they said while on U.S. 
soils, shouldn't this administration be just as strong and 
reciprocal that we will not tolerate that activity even off our 
shores? Isn't that ultimately what the United States must make 
available to the world? Essentially guarantee a First Amendment 
to anyone anywhere if they want to do business with the United 
States? Mr. Price.
    Mr. Price. The leadership of the United States on this 
issue has been transformative for the discussion in Europe. 
From the President, Secretary Rubio, and the Vice President, 
they have transformed the issue. I hope more comes.
    Mr. Issa. To the fringe Parliamentarian, as you were called 
and probably the future Prime Minister, what say you?
    Mr. Farage. Yes. For Mr. Nadler's benefit, it's a very big 
fringe, and we're doing rather well, but there we are.
    Look, if you were to follow, Mr. Issa, the logic of your 
argument that you were to ban people from entering America, it 
would pass legislation that was prejudicial against American 
companies or American citizens and would threaten them with 
potential arrest if they came across the other side of the 
pond.
    I think the practical difficulty with that is you'd have to 
ban the British Government, the entire Labour Party. I'm not 
sure in practical terms that it works, but I understand the 
sentiment.
    Mr. Issa. Thank you. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The gentlelady 
from California is recognized for five minutes.
    Ms. Lofgren. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Let me be clear. I am not here to defend the European laws, 
and I've often criticized the approach of European countries to 
internet-related issues. It's really generally wrongheaded. I 
don't really think that's the point of this hearing.
    The real threat to the First Amendment isn't coming from 
Europe. It's coming from Republican-led States that have 
introduced bills to close the open internet and, most of all, 
from Donald Trump, who's actively trampling free speech here at 
home.
    It's rather absurd for this committee to spend our time 
criticizing laws we have no jurisdiction over while ignoring 
the countless ways the Trump Administration is tearing up the 
First Amendment.
    If this Committee is really serious about protecting free 
speech, we need to focus on the Trump Administration's literal 
assault on the First Amendment that's happening right here at 
home.
    So, Professor Kaye, I have a series of questions for you.
    Do you think that arresting international students for 
being critical of U.S. foreign policy is an attack on the First 
Amendment?
    Mr. Kaye. Yes, absolutely.
    Ms. Lofgren. Isn't that because it's not just the right of 
the person to speak but the right of all the rest of us to 
hear. The First Amendment isn't just about the Speaker. It's 
also about the listener. Isn't that correct?
    Mr. Kaye. Right. That's true.
    Ms. Lofgren. Now, a Federal judge agreed with you and with 
us, warning that arresting students for their views chills the 
speech of millions of Americans. The government can't punish 
speech simply because they don't like its content.
    This here has been mentioned by others. President Trump's 
FCC blocked the CBS merger until the network agreed to change 
its programming and install a so-called bias monitor. The head 
of ``60 Minutes'' resigned, saying he could no longer make 
independent decisions about the news.
    Doesn't that sound like a violation of the First 
Amendment's guarantee of a free press?
    Mr. Kaye. It does. It's important to underline that 
restrictions on free speech don't come just from a law or the 
police outside your door. It can come from a whole network of 
intimidation, of public attack that really does chill speech, 
including the kinds of attacks that lead to deportations of 
people who are here just to study.
    Ms. Lofgren. Since January, the Trump Administration has 
revoked over 6,000 student visas because the speech of these 
students didn't align with what Trump agreed with, and now 
they're doing the same to immigrants who are applying for 
citizenship.
    Does that raise First Amendment concerns, do you think?
    Mr. Kaye. It raises First Amendment concerns, but it's 
also--in a broader way, it's raising concerns about our 
tolerance of dissent, of this government's tolerance of 
criticism.
    Not everything is specifically about the First Amendment 
and the ability to enforce it in our courts. Sometimes it's 
about leaders in our country actually promoting a culture of 
open debate and open access to information, the very things 
that we've heard a lot about already this morning, a kind of 
marketplace of ideas that some people still talk about.
    That's not just about what the law provides. That's also 
about how our leaders behave toward that kind of open debate.
    Ms. Lofgren. The Federal Trade Commission held up a merger 
of two major advertising firms Omnicom and Interpublic until 
they agreed to run ads on X, essentially a government-ordered 
gift to Elon Musk.
    Isn't that a blatant violation of free speech standards, 
forcing private companies to promote speech they otherwise 
wouldn't?
    Mr. Kaye. It's certainly a kind of extensive use of the 
term of jawboning that has come up over the last several years, 
and it's a kind of pressure that absolutely interferes with 
free speech. It's also the kind of weaponizing of our Federal 
agencies in support of a particular actor, a particular 
businessperson.
    Ms. Lofgren. It seems to me that these actions affect not 
just the companies or the individuals that are the target of 
this abuse, but they're also to scare off everyone else from 
engaging in that behavior. Would you agree with that?
    Mr. Kaye. Absolutely. That is what we're seeing right now 
with just this essentially an avalanche of restrictions and 
intimidations of free speech in this country that it's designed 
to chill that kind of debate.
    It's designed to chill whistleblowers, to chill scientists, 
to chill professors and students. That's essentially what we're 
witnessing right now.
    Ms. Lofgren. My time has expired, Mr. Chair. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back.
    Mr. Issa. Mr. Chair, I ask unanimous consent.
    Chair Jordan. An UC request from the gentleman from 
California.
    Mr. Issa. Yes. I ask unanimous consent that the Politico 
news that was dated June 27, 2025, saying ``Gavin Newsom Sues 
for 787 Million,'' be placed in the record.
    Chair Jordan. Without objection. Mr. Price, has anything in 
the Digital Services Act changed in the last year?
    Mr. Price. No, sir.
    Chair Jordan. It hasn't been amended? It hasn't been 
changed at all?
    Mr. Price. No, sir.
    Chair Jordan. Everything Mr. Breton wrote one year ago--
well, August 12, 2024, that's still in place, where he said to 
an American running an American company about an interview that 
was yet to happen, a future happening interview, threatened 
this individual, none of that has--nothing in the law has 
changed that would change the actions this individual took?
    Mr. Price. Nothing in the law.
    Chair Jordan. Just because Mr. Breton is gone doesn't mean 
Ms. Virkkunen can't do the same darn thing, right?
    Mr. Price. Precisely.
    Chair Jordan. Yes, and that's the concern. Mr. Price, is 
the statement ``we need to take back our country,'' is that 
statement hate speech?
    Mr. Price. We don't really know what hate speech is, it's 
so vague, and that's the problem with it. I wouldn't regard 
that as hate speech.
    Chair Jordan. Well, you may not, but the EU regulators do, 
because they had a workshop on May 25th where--and this is part 
of our investigation, material we've subpoenaed. They gave us 
this information, and they said it is hate speech. That's a 
concern, right?
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir.
    Chair Jordan. It could be made by an American and be termed 
hate speech, and there could be some ramifications for 
Americans' First Amendment liberties. Is that accurate?
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir.
    Chair Jordan. OK. Mr. Price, what's a trusted flagger?
    Mr. Price. A trusted flagger is an NGO or a private 
organization that's recognized under the DSA. If they identify 
or a complaint has been made--
    Chair Jordan. Wait, wait, wait. Recognized by who?
    Mr. Price. Oh, the terms of the DSA. Oh, and the national 
regulators and the commission as well.
    Chair Jordan. OK. They do what? They're recognized by the 
government. They're approved by the government, right?
    Mr. Price. Yes.
    Chair Jordan. What do they do?
    Mr. Price. If they identify content that they regard as 
illegal content, the companies have to give priority to 
removing that content.
    Chair Jordan. People that the government approves tell 
companies what they can allow on their platform and what they 
can't, right?
    Mr. Price. That is correct, sir.
    Chair Jordan. The same people who approve these folks are 
the same people who conducted the workshop and said ``we need 
to take back our country'' is hate speech. Is that fair to say?
    Mr. Price. That is correct, sir.
    Chair Jordan. That's the concern. What happens if these 
trusted flaggers approved by the government, the same 
government that says ``we need to take back our country'' is 
hate speech--by the way, that statement is made probably more 
by Democrats right now than Republicans. The head of the 
Democratic National Committee made that statement like thee 
months ago at a big Democrat rally or something they were 
having.
    The same people who say that's hate speech approve the 
trusted flaggers, who then tell the platforms what they can and 
can't have on their platform. If they don't agree with what the 
trusted flaggers say, there are civil penalties. Is that right?
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir. Both under national law and the DSA, 
investigations begin, and there's a whole process that can 
result in enforcement and then ultimately crippling fines for 
companies.
    Chair Jordan. Those crippling fines or civil penalties can 
be what, 5-10 percent of global revenue, depending on the 
Online Services Act or the DSA?
    Mr. Price. Under the DSA, six percent.
    Chair Jordan. Six percent? Wow, that's a lot of money, 
because these are big companies, right?
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir.
    Chair Jordan. Now, Mr. Farage, it's not just civil 
penalties, though. This is where it gets really scary, because 
my understanding is they can--there's criminal penalties. In 
2023, in the United Kingdom, there were 12,183 arrests for 
offensive posts, 12,000 people arrested for things they posted 
online that some trusted flagger approved by the government, 
the same government that says what's being said at the 
Democratic National Committee, ``we need to take back our 
country,'' is hate speech.
    That's a scary scenario. Is that right?
    Mr. Farage. Yes. They're math statistics. Some of it comes 
under noncrime hate incidents. You've said something on social 
media. Someone's taken objection. You get the knock at the door 
from the police sort of warning you that if you do this again 
something may happen.
    This has now been broadened out. Mr. Price made the point, 
what is hate speech? How do you define hate speech? That's the 
problem, isn't it, with all these laws?
    Chair Jordan. Yes.
    Mr. Farage. That we finish up in a position where local 
police forces, et cetera, have to choose their own 
interpretations.
    Again, as I said to you earlier, the timing of this hearing 
today is perfect, because the head of the Metropolitan Police 
who arrested Graham Linehan at Heathrow Airport, he's thrown 
the ball back now to the British Home Secretary and the 
government to say, ``Please tell us what is this law intended--
what are we supposed to, as the police, to do?''
    We're going to have a much more rapid debate about this, 
but my worry is it may get worse, if I may quickly.
    Chair Jordan. Yes.
    Mr. Farage. Because the Labour Government now is intending 
to pass a law that has a definition of Islamophobia. They're 
intending to put that into law. That effectively will mean that 
criticism of a religion, mocking of a religion would become an 
offense, and that's totally against everything. We've always 
given the Pope a hard time. We've always given the Archbishop 
of Canterbury a hard time. We're finishing up kind of with two-
tier law and two-tier justice, and that's very concerning.
    Chair Jordan. Yes. I have one other question I'd like to 
get from maybe you and Mr. Price, if I could.
    Speaking of religion, tell me what performative prayer is. 
This is something we've seen in, or we've discovered in our 
investigative work. Maybe we'll start with Mr. Price and then 
go to Mr. Farage.
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir. We have a client at the moment who's 
being prosecuted in or who was arrested in Bristol, a Christian 
pastor preaching about the differences between Christianity and 
Islam. He was then assaulted by a group people identifying as 
Islamic people. The police arrived, and they arrested him, not 
the people who assaulted him.
    This is the State of play in the United Kingdom in terms of 
free speech and, unfortunately, across Europe. I have a whole 
file of cases here where people have been arrested for 
criticisms of Islam where they're being prosecuted. Things are 
getting pretty bad.
    Mr. Farage. Yes. That extends to abortion clinics, doesn't 
it? The abortion debate in Britain and Europe is different to 
the abortion debate in America. It's in a different place. We 
have seen people warned or arrested if they've been seen to be 
praying outside abortion clinics, even if they're doing it 
silently. Hence, it's performative in the sense they're doing 
that.
    I'm afraid you now have to be a certain distance away from 
one of these clinics. If other Members of the public object and 
say that your praying there is causing them psychological harm, 
well, the police may intervene.
    Chair Jordan. Thank you.
    Mr. Kaye. Chair, may I comment on one of these issues very 
briefly?
    Chair Jordan. I'm fine if the Ranking Member--OK. I may 
have to ask you a question after you comment when you do that. 
Go ahead.
    Mr. Kaye. I realize I'm opening the door.
    Chair Jordan. Yes.
    Mr. Kaye. I just wanted to note on this question of what is 
hate speech. First, the question of identifying hate speech is 
not something that happens in a vacuum. In the U.K., in Europe, 
there are very strict rules around the definition of hate 
speech that connected not merely to speech but to incitement.
    It's incitement to violence or hatred or discrimination. 
That's just an important baseline point, that this isn't just 
about pure speech. It's about the kind of speech that might 
lead to violence.
    Related to that, when you mention this hypothetical of 
``take back our country'' and is that hate speech, my 
understanding is that came up in the context of a hypothetical 
related to persistent harassment of a Muslim girl, and that was 
the hypothetical.
    The question was, in that particular context, did that 
constitute a kind of incitement to some violence against this 
young girl. It's important to put some of these kinds of 
abstract questions into that kind of context.
    Chair Jordan. Professor, did you agree with the Biden 
Administration when they established the Disinformation 
Governance Board?
    Mr. Kaye. I didn't take a position on that. I do think that 
disinformation is an issue that--
    Chair Jordan. Do you think the government should be 
deciding what we can say and what we can't?
    Mr. Kaye. Absolutely not.
    Chair Jordan. OK. Well, that's good to know. I'll give the 
Ranking Member a little extra time if he so desires. With that, 
I'll recognize the gentleman from Tennessee.
    Mr. Cohen. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    First, I was pleased to join on the codel. It was a very 
fine, good codel, and I appreciate the Chair and my friend and 
my classmate from 2006.
    One of the things I found most heartening about the codel, 
we had a tour of Parliament. Along with us were two 
Conservative Members who were--I think they were either in 
House of Lords--maybe one was in Lords and one was in the House 
of Commons, but they talked to us about the Magna Carta and 
about how it's the basis of our laws. There was a copy there 
and copies here and there and whatever, but how precious the 
Magna Carta is.
    They suggested to us that a legislator--this was in the 
House of Lords where he spoke--that a legislator is not 
somebody who votes. A legislator's job is not just to vote; a 
legislator's job is to stand up to an out-of-control executive. 
Very telling for British Parliament Members to instruct us on 
what we should be doing, and I thank him for that.
    I'm a strong supporter of free speech and always have been, 
but I find this hearing a bit disingenuous because of the 
problems we have here in America. Free speech includes the 
speech of those with whom we disagree, people who say vile 
things. In my case, racist and antisemitic and Islamophobic-
type speech is something I find foul, but it's protected by 
free speech, and offensive speech as well.
    That does not mean that there aren't limitations, however. 
Speech can be harmful, dangerous, and infringe on other 
people's rights. It isn't a free-for-all, though. The U.S. and 
our First Amendment does not have a monopoly on what 
constitutes free speech.
    There is speech protected by the First Amendment, like 
corporate political donations, which is misplaced and 
misapplied, and there are times when our legal system itself 
suppresses disfavored speech.
    I passed the SPEECH Act in the 111th Congress. I think Mr. 
Issa was my cosponsor. It dealt with the fact that Britain is a 
favored Nation for defamation actions. It's easy to get a 
defamation judgment there. We would not allow those judgments 
to be recognized here in our country under the SPEECH Act if 
the activities that took place did not conform to our laws on 
free speech.
    I would think Mr. Farage could try to look at changing 
their laws on defamation and can contour more to what we see in 
the First Amendment, and that might be good for the people in 
England.
    Two of my good friends, most revered friends, were from 
England, London, Christopher Hitchens and Sir Bill Browder, and 
they've written books, and they could be subject to such laws 
as well. Work on protecting your English authors who from 
Shakespeare on, they've been pretty good.
    We used to be bipartisan in these efforts to look out for 
free speech, but President Trump has taken on free speech in 
ways that would never have been thought about.
    Ms. Lofgren brought some points to Professor Kaye. It's not 
just laws; it's autocratic actions as well. President Trump, as 
Mr. Dalio said clearly, but so many other people have said it 
and felt it, is bringing us on the verge of an autocratic 
State.
    His actions in trying to bring law firms to their knees, 
colleges to their knees, Federal employees, students, et 
cetera, is antifree speech, antiopportunity, and fear for 
themselves and their futures if they speak out. Even 
Congresspeople could be subject in the future, I'm sure, with 
some of the ways we're seeing this Justice Department act with 
questions about their speech.
    Our President has sued every broadcasting company almost. 
They've gone after CNN. They've gone after NBC. They pick some 
of these fringe people to pick on the Ukrainian President about 
his attire. It's bizarre what's going on in our country, and 
I'm concerned. They try to silence and shake down those who 
don't conform to whatever the President thinks.
    We need to understand that his review of the Smithsonian 
exhibits and other--African American Museum, in saying there 
was too much emphasis on how bad slavery was. I don't know how 
you can find anything good about slavery. Edwin Starr, who's a 
singer, would tell you about slavery, like war, there's 
absolutely nothing good about it.
    We shouldn't be trying to--Professor Kaye, how would you 
compare, from your expertise, how we evaluate and compare with 
relative states of freedom of expression written in the United 
States. Where do you see the comparisons?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, right now we're at a very dismal place in 
the United States. I do think that it's also worth thinking a 
bit about some of the issues that Mr. Farage raised.
    For example, he mentioned the issue of a law against 
Islamo-phobia, but there's also a lot of discussion about laws 
against antisemitism and against other attacks on people on 
their status, on the basis of their religion and so forth.
    Those are actually valuable conversations to have, but you 
can't just sort of pick and choose which censorship, or which 
restrictions are OK, and which are not. You really need to have 
a general view as to what's appropriate.
    Again, the Chair's point about censorship being a focus on 
criticism is the appropriate one. To the extent that we can 
make that comparison, which country is really doing more or 
which countries are really doing more to tamp down, to silence 
critics. That's the harm to our democracy. Right now, I see 
that more in the United States than I see in Europe or in the 
U.K.
    Chair Jordan. The time of the gentleman has expired.
    Mr. Cohen. I'd just like to say welcome. I have a lot of 
British friends and respect for Britain. I have a great time 
when I'm there, and I'm happy we won the war.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back.
    The gentleman from Arizona is recognized.
    Mr. Biggs. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    The statement that Trump is bringing us to the edge of 
being an autocratic state in and of itself disproves the 
premise of that statement. Think about that. It's absurd.
    Under the First Amendment, the general proposition is that 
government should not be regulating the content of its 
citizens' speech. You have the opposing idea that it's the 
responsibility of government to decide not only what its 
citizens should think, but what content they are allowed to see 
and engage with.
    The sum of the reality of the government regulation of free 
speech may sound like it's a distant authoritarian notion that 
won't come to the United States of America, but I would ask you 
to just think back again. I'm reminded of Orwell's ``1984.''
    Think of the memory hole that people are trying to memory 
hole right now, some even on this panel, sir, who don't want 
you to realize how bad a government can be when it attempts to 
censor right here in the United States. For instance, President 
Obama--this is from an article. I'd ask unanimous consent.
    Chair Jordan. No objection.
    Mr. Biggs. President Obama has been the most aggressive 
administration in history, not only going after whistleblowers, 
but pursuing reporters who write their stories.
    How about this one, the Biden legacy. How about this whole 
stack--and I'll put these in just a second. It's convenient to 
memory hole what the Biden Administration did, what they did to 
suppress dissent and contrary opinion. I'll get into that in a 
second.
    The actions of European governments show that the type of 
censorship by government is not only possible but very much 
doable. Under the guise of public safety, government officials 
in Europe have suppressed and arrested individuals who have 
simply engaged in political speech that is arbitrarily deemed 
to be unspeakable by the government.
    This kind of regime doesn't just appear on the scene, 
though. It takes time to develop. We've seen it here, and 
that's why I'm taking this opportunity to remind you that FISA 
must be reformed. The FISA must be reformed.
    Mr. Price, you alluded to this, and so I have this document 
right here that compares the GDP growth of ``GDP Growth 
Comparison: EU vs. US (1998-2023).'' The U.S. has grown about 
87 percent, almost 90 percent. The EU has increased its GDP by 
about 13 percent. You have almost a six X variable there.
    The question is, when you set these kind of draconian 
fines, and you set up a system that is amorphous and almost 
indefinable, might it not also have--more than just even the 
safety, ostensible safety of the society, might it lead to 
trying to regulate when you can't innovate?
    Mr. Price. That's very much the case, sir. We've seen it 
not just in the area of speech but, obviously, as we're 
discussing, the Digital Markets Act, data protection and so on.
    Europe is facing some very serious structural problems 
demographically, financially. A lot of what I think is 
inspiring the DSA is what we saw from Germany beginning after 
the election of President Trump and after Brexit, which is to 
control the narrative, slow down speech.
    Into that then, they're throwing a very wide net out that's 
affecting all kinds of legitimate speech. We talked about my 
client, Paivi Rasanen in Finland, who was prosecuted for 
sharing a tweet from the Bible. It's absolutely outrageous. 
That becomes now the standard that the DSA will set, not just 
for Europe but possibly and predictably globally.
    Mr. Biggs. Similarly, Mr. Reed, that's going to happen to 
your app innovators. They're not going to be able to have 
access to 440 million people in a marketplace in Europe without 
having to go through essentially government censorship.
    Mr. Reed. Well, you hit it earlier when you said that their 
focus has been on regulating or adding legislation. It isn't 
one piece of regulation or one piece of legislation that has 
caused problems for our innovators both in the U.K., in the EU, 
and in America. It's been a stacking effect because, if you 
start with one regulation, I can handle that. I'll build that 
into my business. It's when you have one, then two, then four, 
and then six.
    What's been the biggest problem for growth has been their 
answer is that old quip the beatings will continue until morale 
improves. We often feel that way about regulation. Innovation 
will get regulated until we get more innovation. I don't think 
that will work out.
    Mr. Biggs. Thanks, Mr. Reed.
    Now I'll finish with you, Mr. Farage. What happened to the 
great countries of the West? Seriously, and their liberal 
understanding of civil rights and the ability to speak one's 
mind openly without fear of arrest or censorship or abuse of 
harassment by the government?
    Mr. Farage. What went wrong in many ways is we forgot why 
we actually had those liberties and had those freedoms in the 
first place. We forgot that--as I mentioned or touched on 
earlier, we forgot the huge sacrifices that were made by 
citizens alive at that time to defend those principles against 
tyranny and against dictatorship.
    We've lost our way in understanding why we are as we are. 
That has permeated through the education system where I'm not 
sure we've been teaching good values.
    The slavery comment was made earlier. I completely 
understand, there's nothing good about slavery. Take our 
country. We spent decades driving slavery off the high seas. 
While we were perpetrators to begin with, we actually in the 
end drove it off the high seas. We need to teach our kids a 
sense of balance about our history and about the sacrifice 
that's been made. That's my feeling.
    Mr. Biggs. Mr. Chair, I have some unanimous consent.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman is recognized.
    Mr. Biggs. (a) ``GDP growth comparison GDP Growth 
Comparison: EU vs. US (1998-2023).''
    (b) ``Biden's press freedom legacy: Empty words and 
hypocrisy.''
    (c) ``Massive government censorship during and about 
COVID,'' from the New Civil Liberties Alliance.
    (d) ``The Fifth Circuit agrees that Federal officials 
unconstitutionally coerced or encouraged online censorship,'' 
under the Biden Administration.
    (e) ``Information during the pandemic suppressed.''
    (f) ``Feds blew $267 million fighting `misinformation' 
under Biden--as Trump vows to ban `censorship cartel.' ''
    (g) ``How the FBI violated the privacy rights of tens of 
thousands of Americans.''
    (h) ``The inspector general report on FBI's FISA abuse 
tells us one thing: We need radical reform.''
    (i) ``U.K. comedy writer Graham Linehan arrested over 
social media post criticizing trans activist.''
    (j) ``Why did Lucy Connolly receive a 31-month sentence for 
Southport tweet?''
    (k) ``Policing thought crime should have no place in the 
U.K.''
    (l) ``Britain's emerging police State.''
    (m) ``Knock, knock, It's the Thought Police: As thousands 
of criminals go uninvestigated, detectives call on a 
grandmother. Her crime? She went on Facebook to criticize 
Labour councillors.''
    (n) ``U.K. Steps up Free Speech Crackdown as Armed Police 
Arrest Comedy Writer Graham Linehan at Heathrow Airport.''
    (o) ``Britain's New Thought Police: How Labour Plans to 
Police your Online Speech.''
    Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Chair Jordan. Without objection.
    Mr. Cohen. Mr. Chair, I'd like to offer two unanimous 
consent requests. I'm not going to challenge the forest as much 
as the gentleman is, but two records, letters to you, one to 
you and one to Commissioner Virkkunen pushing back on the 
framing of this hearing from 30 EU and U.S. academics.
    Chair Jordan. Thank you. Without objection. The gentleman 
from Georgia is recognized.
    Mr. Johnson. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Mr. Farage, welcome to 
the United States of America. This isn't your first time here, 
correct?
    Mr. Farage. Correct.
    Mr. Johnson. You were here in 2024 in Milwaukee, weren't 
you?
    Mr. Farage. I've been coming here since 1982 on a very 
regular basis. I work for American companies.
    Mr. Johnson. For what purpose were you coming to Milwaukee 
for? Why did you come to Milwaukee?
    Mr. Farage. I've been to Milwaukee many times. I think that 
was some type of event. It was a convention.
    Mr. Johnson. In 2024, it was the convention, the Republican 
Convention.
    Mr. Farage. Yes. I think that's right. I think you're 
right.
    Mr. Johnson. The Trump convention.
    Mr. Farage. I think you're right. Very good.
    Mr. Johnson. Where Trump was coronated.
    Mr. Farage. Well, he won, didn't he? That's what happened.
    Mr. Johnson. He had already won. We already knew who had 
won.
    Mr. Farage. It's called political policy.
    Mr. Johnson. It was his coronation, and you attended. You 
also attended Trump rallies, correct?
    Mr. Farage. I've attended lots of Trump rallies.
    Mr. Johnson. Make America Great Again rallies, many of 
them.
    Mr. Farage. Yes, optimistic, happy, wonderful, and joyous 
events.
    Mr. Johnson. You publicly endorsed his--
    Mr. Farage. I thoroughly enjoyed them. I've even spoken 
about--
    Mr. Johnson. You endorsed him for President, and you 
attended his election night watch party.
    Mr. Farage. I did.
    Mr. Johnson. You consider Trump to be your mentor, correct?
    Mr. Farage. No.
    Mr. Johnson. He's not your mentor?
    Mr. Farage. No. Sorry.
    Mr. Johnson. He is somebody who you want the support of, 
and you have the support of.
    Mr. Farage. Yes, I do. I think he's a very, very brave man.
    Mr. Johnson. Because you're getting ready to run for Prime 
Minister of Great Britain, correct?
    Mr. Farage. Oh, I've been trying for years, yes.
    Mr. Johnson. As it stands right now, you head up a party. 
How many seats in the Parliament are there?
    Mr. Farage. Six hundred and fifty-one, if you include the 
Speaker, that is.
    Mr. Johnson. Six hundred and fifty-one.
    Mr. Farage. Yes.
    Mr. Johnson. How many are a part--how many seats does your 
party hold?
    Mr. Farage. How many seats do the opinion polls say we're 
going to get next time? Is that the question?
    Mr. Johnson. No. The numbers don't lie.
    Mr. Farage. Oh, I see.
    Mr. Johnson. You only have four seats, right?
    Mr. Farage. I'm afraid so, yes.
    Mr. Johnson. You are indeed the leader of a fringe party.
    Mr. Farage. Oh, I'm a fringe, all right. Don't worry about 
that. Yes, absolutely. Everything I've ever done.
    Mr. Johnson. As a fringe party leader seeking to run for 
Prime Minister of Great Britain, you need a lot of money to 
blow up like the MAGA movement has blown up.
    Mr. Farage. What you need is a message of truth and a 
message of hope, and--
    Mr. Johnson. Well, you need money also, right?
    Mr. Farage. Money is helpful, but it's not the primary 
thing you need.
    Mr. Johnson. The first thing that came out of--
    Mr. Farage. No, you're wrong.
    Mr. Johnson. The first thing that came out of the Chair's 
mouth this morning during his opening statement had to do with 
Elon Musk.
    Mr. Farage. Yes.
    Mr. Johnson. You're carrying water for Elon Musk today, 
aren't you?
    Mr. Farage. From what I can see, Elon Musk is abusive about 
me virtually every single week, but it's a free country, so 
he's entitled to--
    Mr. Johnson. You never stop trying to ingratiate yourself 
with him.
    Mr. Farage. Wrong, wrong. You're wrong.
    Mr. Johnson. Well, you are familiar with the fact--
    Mr. Farage. You're wrong.
    Mr. Johnson. You are familiar with the fact, Mr. Farage--
    Mr. Farage. I had a public fallout with Elon Musk.
    Mr. Johnson. --that Donald Trump's campaign benefited to 
the extent of $250 million from Elon Musk.
    Mr. Farage. Well, I mean how much did--
    Mr. Johnson. You are familiar with that, correct?
    Mr. Farage. How much did Mr. Zuckerberg give to the 
Democrats? This is what happens--
    Mr. Johnson. Well, he didn't give any money to the 
Democrats.
    Mr. Farage. Let me be clear.
    Mr. Johnson. He was sitting behind Trump with the rest of 
the tech bros. You are here today--
    Mr. Farage. I'm going to answer your question.
    Mr. Johnson. --to impress all those tech bros, including 
Elon Musk. Isn't that correct?
    Mr. Farage. I'm going to answer your question very, very 
honestly.
    Mr. Johnson. You need money from Elon Musk to get elected 
Prime Minister of Great Britain. That's the bottom line. Is 
that correct?
    Mr. Farage. We can sit here all day as long as the Chair 
allows us. I don't mind. I had a very public falling-out with 
Elon Musk early in the year over a political issue.
    Mr. Johnson. You're still trying to get some money from 
him, though. It's not about the prior dispute.
    Mr. Farage. I'm sorry. It was a fundamental--
    Mr. Johnson. You are trying to ingratiate yourself with the 
tech bros by coming over here and--
    Mr. Farage. Can I get a cup of coffee or something?
    Mr. Johnson. You're arguing--
    Mr. Farage. I've been sitting here for a long time.
    Mr. Johnson. What you're arguing is that the citizens of 
Great Britain should pay a tariff if these tech companies are 
not allowed to violate the laws of Great Britain.
    Mr. Farage. No, I'm not. That was a falsehood put out by 
the British Prime Minister today.
    Mr. Johnson. You didn't say in your statement--
    Mr. Farage. I have never suggested any of this kind--
    Mr. Johnson. Your statement, you don't call tariffs as 
tools to force Great Britain--
    Mr. Farage. My statement is very clear. My statement is--
    Mr. Johnson. You are not calling for tariffs and trade 
sanctions?
    Mr. Farage. It might surprise you. It might surprise you to 
know that trade. No. That trade--you may not know this, but 
trade between our countries is actually rather important. You 
are the biggest investor in our country. We're not the biggest 
investor in yours.
    Mr. Johnson. What you've done is--
    Chair Jordan. The time of the gentleman from Georgia has 
expired.
    Mr. Johnson. What you did is come here to the United 
States--
    Mr. Biggs. Regular order, Mr. Chair. He's been rude. He's 
been disgusting. He's been hilarious.
    Chair Jordan. Hang on. Hang on. The gentleman's time is 
expired.
    I feel like we should give Mr. Farage a chance to respond 
to one of the many questions he was not allowed to respond to. 
We'll give you 30 seconds, Mr. Farage, and then we'll move on 
to our next one. Because I know Mr. Farage does have to leave 
in about an hour. We want to get through as many Members as we 
can.
    Mr. Farage. No. 1, I had a public fallout over a political 
issue with Elon Musk. I can't be bullied by anybody. I haven't 
changed my mind.
    The last time I looked, he was being spectacularly rude 
about me yesterday. That's life. If we believe in free speech, 
we live with it. What I've made very clear--
    Mr. Johnson. You're fixated on--
    Mr. Farage. What I've made--now, this is my time, I think.
    Chair Jordan. Yes. You got 19 seconds.
    Mr. Farage. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    What I've made perfectly clear in this paper is the 
situation we've got with successive pieces of legislation, 
including now the Online Safety Act, which is a danger to trade 
between our countries.
    The allies and friends and trading partners have honest 
conversations with each other. I hope many American companies 
and politicians have honest conversations with the British 
Government.
    Chair Jordan. You're done.
    Mr. Farage. I've not suggested sanctions at all in any way.
    Mr. Johnson. Good luck with your race.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman from California is recognized.
    Mr. McClintock. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    First, I'd remind my colleague from Georgia that President 
Trump was openly nominated after decisively winning the primary 
votes across the country. That's in open contrast to the 
Democratic nominee, who was decreed the nominee of her party in 
spite of the fact she did not receive a single primary vote. I 
would be a little careful if I were him about talking about 
coronations.
    I do agree with my Democratic colleagues that we need to be 
on guard against suppression of free speech, whether it's 
coming from the Left or the Right. I disagree with them that 
the Chief Executive regulating the Executive Branch's 
communications or conforming executive agencies and grantees to 
executive policy is somehow a threat to free speech.
    The Executive Branch is designed to speak with one voice, a 
voice chosen every four years by the people. I disagree with 
them that suing for defamation is an infringement on speech in 
a legal system where the truth is an absolute defense.
    The threat to democracy is from the government regulating 
other people's communications. We're now discovering that the 
Biden Administration used the FBI to pressure tech companies to 
censor the communications of American people over a free 
discussion of everything from COVID policy and origins, the 
Russian collusion hoax, Biden family influence peddling, and 
climate change. I myself was the victim of this censorship when 
I warned of the damage that the COVID lockdowns were causing.
    Now, democracy assumes that the best way to separate truth 
from lies or wisdom from folly or good from evil or love from 
hate is to place the two of them side by side and then trust 
the commonsense and judgment of the people to know the 
difference.
    This assumes that the people have full and unfettered 
freedom to express themselves and to challenge the claims and 
opinions of each other. Now, some of our colleagues seem to be 
suggesting that we should transfer that prerogative from the 
people to the government. That's the very definition of 
authoritarianism.
    Mr. Farage, what are your thoughts?
    Mr. Farage. Yes, I agree with that. As citizens, we should 
be free to make our minds up, to express our opinions, to a 
large extent to make our own mistakes, provided--and we all 
know there's a limit to free speech.
    The professor talked about incitement earlier, and, of 
course, we would be absolutely joined together on that. We 
don't want incitement. We're accepting--incitement. If people 
put out something irrational or inciteful but very quickly put 
their hands up and apologize and learn their lesson, that's 
kind of how the world is. I do not want government to be the 
arbiter of what I should think.
    Mr. McClintock. We have a word for that. It's demos kratos, 
rule by the people--Democracy.
    Mr. Farage. Yes, I'm with you on that. I also agree with 
you--the COVID. I touched on this earlier. It was during COVID 
when rational debate about many important issues, be it mask 
wearing, be it lockdowns, rational debate on these things was, 
frankly, stamped out. This was supported by big social media 
companies, many--not GB News, obviously, but many TV stations, 
et cetera. It's a very dark period that we're coming out of.
    Mr. McClintock. In this country, what we're discovering is 
that was being done under pressure by the FBI directed by the 
Executive Branch of the government under Joe Biden.
    Just briefly, how did this happen to the U.K. and the EU, 
and what lessons should we be drawing here today?
    Mr. Farage. Well, we joined the EU half a century ago, or 
the EC as it was then called. It was a huge mistake, in my 
opinion. We forgot about common law, the kind of law that you 
guys have always enjoyed too. We sort of gradually transferred 
to a European way of thinking.
    We incorporated a Human Rights Act, which kind of meant 
really that--as opposed to being born free, under a human 
rights regime, the State gives you your rights, which you were 
supposed to be incredibly grateful, but they can take them away 
whenever they like.
    We lost our bearings. The U.K. lost its way. It became 
obsessed about doing things the European way, countries, 
frankly, that don't have that history of liberty, freedom, and 
democracy that we do.
    Mr. McClintock. Finally, what do you see as the shape of 
things to come? Are we going to regain these freedoms or lose 
them?
    Mr. Farage. Well, ultimately the people have to get what 
they vote for. One of the reasons that we are seeing an 
extraordinary political revolution that is happening in parts 
of Europe, and if you believe the polls, what is happening in 
the United Kingdom right now is we want a government that comes 
in and gets rid of all these laws and starts again and starts 
on the basis, yes, we want to try and protect kids--and we will 
do whatever we can when it's practical to protect kids from 
serious harm online--but we will get back to the idea that I 
can insult you; you can insult me.
    Mr. Raskin and I can have our chats, but we do it in a 
spirit that's not inciteful and in a way that honors those who 
have built our great countries. Thank you.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. Well done.
    The gentlelady from Washington is recognized.
    Ms. Jayapal. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    It wasn't too long ago that Democrats and Republicans on 
this Committee together agreed to undertake a 16-month 
investigation into the anticompetitive practices of Big Tech 
companies--I represent many of them in Seattle--and proposed 
bipartisan legislation, which actually passed this Committee, 
to restore fairness and competition for consumers and small 
businesses.
    That included the American Choice and Innovation Online 
Act, or AC-IOA, which included similar commonsense structural 
solutions to what the EU included in the Digital Markets Act. 
It was a real recognition that these Big Tech companies are 
squelching competition and innovation, and that hurts 
consumers.
    It's a big turnaround then that suddenly the Republican 
Majority wants to do something as absurd as use trade 
negotiations to help bolster Big Tech in Europe, when EU has 
undertaken the very smart solutions that fight back against Big 
Tech monopolies and protect consumers and small businesses.
    Maybe it's linked to the fact that these Big Tech companies 
are now pouring money into Donald Trump's campaign funds. I 
don't know. Maybe it's because they're making all kinds of 
deals to screw consumers and preference giant corporations in 
exchange for campaign contributions and a 24-carat gold plaque 
to Donald Trump like the CEO of Apple just recently did.
    It seems to me that the Republican Party has suddenly 
turned its back on small businesses, on competition, on 
innovation, and, yes, even on free speech, which is apparently 
the topic of discussion today.
    In fact, one of our witnesses here claims to represent--one 
of the Republican witnesses claims to represent small- and 
medium-size app developers, but his organization gets more than 
half of its funding from Apple, the very giant corporation that 
those same small- and medium-size app developers are trying to 
fight. Make it make sense for me.
    Now, we have this hearing centered around so-called free 
speech and so-called censorship, not here in America but in 
Europe. Well, what about right here at home on U.S. soil, the 
censorship by the Trump Administration, the Republican Party, 
on anything that they don't agree with.
    Let's just take a recent example. Rumeysa Ozturk, a Ph.D. 
student at Tufts University, wrote an op-ed in the student 
newspaper calling for the university to divest from Israel. It 
was a simple exercise of her free--First Amendment free speech 
rights. She committed no crime. She didn't bully or harass 
anyone. She didn't incite violence toward anyone. The action 
was totally peaceful.
    Yet what happened? In March, the Trump Administration 
revoked her student visa, sent masked men to kidnap and 
disappear her, forcing her into an unmarked car and detained 
her for 45 days.
    Professor Kaye, how does this kind of abuse utilizing the 
immigration system in this case for now, for now, can extend to 
U.S. citizens, to green card holders, to anyone else, how does 
this hinder the free speech rights of all Americans?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, we've seen already that Americans have 
been--American citizens have been caught in the enforcement of 
immigration laws over the last--and outside of the immigration 
laws over the last several months, but I think we can look at 
it from two perspectives.
    One is it's a clear violation of a student's free speech 
right, as you just explained it, when they're detained and set 
up for deportation solely because of an op-ed that they wrote. 
It's also an intimidation for anybody who would write anything 
further.
    Anybody who's in that same kind of visa situation now is 
not going to be writing that op-ed. That's not just harm to 
them. That's not just chilling their speech. That's also harm 
to all of us who would benefit from hearing those kinds of 
views.
    Ms. Jayapal. In fact, right now the Trump Administration is 
reviewing all social media of visa applicants to see if they've 
posted any anti-Trump or pro-Palestinian sentiments.
    How does that affect our free speech rights?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, it's the same answer. It's a deterioration 
of our public debate in this country. It's exactly this kind 
of--I think that Mr. McClintock had said before, putting side 
by side different ideas, and that's an interference with that.
    Ms. Jayapal. Quickly another example: In June, a Spanish 
language reporter named Mario Guevara was live-streaming a 
gathering of Americans protesting against Trump's immigration 
policy. The police arrested him on bogus misdemeanor charges 
that were later dropped a few days later. He was detained by 
ICE.
    Now, we've got a government that arrests a student for 
writing an op-ed, filters the speech of visitors, and arrests a 
journalist for covering a protest.
    How does that compare to free speech practices of other 
countries?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, it does compare with authoritarians, who 
regularly use law enforcement to transform journalism into a 
crime. This is a major global censorship problem, and we're 
seeing it in Georgia. We see it in this context that is not 
just a one-off. It's part of a systemic approach to a free 
media in this country. That's one and perhaps the harshest 
example, because I understand that the journalist remains in 
detention, but it's part of a systemic approach to speech.
    Ms. Jayapal. Similar to Russia and China, places like that.
    Mr. Chair, I yield back. I have some unanimous consent 
requests.
    Chair Jordan. Do you want to go now or--
    Ms. Jayapal. Yes.
    Chair Jordan. All right. Go ahead.
    Ms. Jayapal. Thank you. I ask for unanimous consent to 
enter into the record a letter from the Open Markets Institute. 
Another one, a letter from the TechFreedom Association raising 
concerns with the FTC's inquiry on censorship. A final one from 
The App Association, and it's titled, ``Apple is top funder of 
lobby group that says it represents small developers.'' I'm 
sorry, Mr. Chair, I have one more here.
    Chair Jordan. OK. Go right ahead.
    Ms. Jayapal. This is an article entitled ``The False Choice 
Between Digital Regulation and Innovation.''
    Chair Jordan. Without objection.
    Ms. Jayapal. Thank you. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. Quickly, Mr. Reed, is your association 
fighting Apple?
    Mr. Reed. Pardon me?
    Chair Jordan. Is your association fighting Apple?
    Mr. Farage. Fighting Apple?
    Chair Jordan. Fighting Apple.
    Mr. Kaye. We disagree with Apple on multiple issues as well 
as for all our sponsors. Our membership is the small businesses 
that many of you have met when we've had our fly in every year.
    Chair Jordan. OK, great. It seems to me that your 
association uses Apple. That's where your apps go. I don't 
think you're fighting Apple.
    The gentleman from Wisconsin is recognized for five 
minutes.
    Mr. Tiffany. Professor Kaye, was the Centers for Disease 
Control correct in 2020 about the handling of COVID? The Chair 
laid out all the things that we now know are debunked. Was the 
Centers for Disease Control correct in how they went about 
their business?
    Mr. Kaye. I'm not a scientist so I can't speak to that. I 
remember the time, like we all did, a time of great fear.
    Mr. Tiffany. Shutting down schools, things like that have 
set kids behind. See, because it's to Representative 
McClintock's point that, once this administration wanted to 
change some people that you talked about that are in the 
Department of Health Services, shouldn't they change them if 
they were wrong about, really, the seminal issue that has come 
before this generation? Shouldn't they change those people?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, that's just not my understanding of why 
people have been taken out.
    Mr. Tiffany. Are you familiar, Professor Kaye, with the 
case Berenson v. Biden, which is a censorship case where Alex 
Beren-son, a reporter, was deplatformed on Twitter?
    Mr. Kaye. I'm not familiar with that one.
    Mr. Tiffany. I would suggest that you take a look at that, 
because the Biden Administration weaponized themselves against 
Mr. Berenson and stifled his speech on Twitter.
    What college are you a professor at, again?
    Mr. Kaye. University of California, Irvine.
    Mr. Tiffany. How many classes are you teaching this 
semester?
    Mr. Kaye. This, I teach one class right now.
    Mr. Tiffany. One class this semester.
    Mr. Farage, I want to thank you so much for coming to the 
great State of Wisconsin of which I represent part of it, 
including Milwaukee. I hope you had a good time there.
    Mr. Farage. I've always had a good time in Milwaukee, no 
question. Wonderful breweries, friendly people. Love it.
    Mr. Tiffany. You're welcome back anytime.
    I want to thank the Ranking Member for giving us a tutorial 
on free speech.
    Mr. Farage, did you instruct anyone on this panel, 
including the Chair, to instruct us to stifle the Ranking 
Member's speech? Did you--
    Mr. Farage. No, absolutely not. Of course not.
    Mr. Tiffany. Can you comment on the key issue before the 
far Right that we heard about earlier? What is that key issue 
in Europe right now that the far Right is heavily engaged in?
    Mr. Farage. Well, I'll speak for the United Kingdom. If 
you're opposed to illegal immigration on a mass scale and the 
huge cost to the taxpayer and the risk to our communities, 
then--oh, and if you like the flag, our national flag, then 
apparently, you're far Right.
    Mr. Tiffany. That illegal immigration issue that was very 
informative to the election in 2024 in America, the same thing 
is happening in Europe. Is that accurate?
    Mr. Farage. It's a very similar argument in many, many 
ways. Therefore, the definition of far Right now applies to 
about two-thirds of the British population.
    Mr. Tiffany. About someone who is very famous from your 
country, Ms. J.K. Rowling, who wrote one of the finest series 
of books, the Harry Potter series, that has ever been in print, 
who I believe is self-defined as a liberal, as we call them in 
America, hasn't she even been threatened for a position she's 
taken in regard to transgenderism?
    Mr. Farage. Yes. She very much comes from a liberal wing of 
politics historically, but she's taken a view that women should 
be safe in women's spaces. That means changing rooms, et 
cetera. That's all she said.
    By the way, that's something that our Supreme Court 
recently did back up, the fact that there are fundamental 
differences. This is not to launch an attack on anyone that's 
trans, just to bring some commonsense. She has faced cancel 
culture and abuse on a huge scale.
    Mr. Tiffany. I would just--one other comment in regard to 
the Ranking Member's opening statement. He was saying that we 
are stifling speech here in America, including PBS, by 
defunding them. I would suggest that the Ranking Member look at 
the news that came out in the past week. It is very good news 
for PBS, where the Ford Foundation and other foundations have 
said they are going to put in tens of millions if not hundreds 
of millions of dollars to make sure that they stay on the air. 
Protecting the American taxpayer, that is a great thing that we 
were able to do with the One Big Beautiful Bill.
    Final question for Mr. Price: How is the problem going to 
be fixed, and can America help?
    Mr. Price. Yes, America can help. The light, the spotlight 
that has already been shown on the problem by the 
administration, by the amazing work that this Committee is 
doing here is hugely welcomed by those of us who support the 
human right to free speech.
    We have people who are suffering under prosecutions, unjust 
prosecutions in Europe right now. I've outlined a lot of them 
in my written submissions. It's only because of the support 
that's coming from this side of the Atlantic that we're able to 
see possibly a brighter future.
    Mr. Tiffany. We will continue those efforts.
    Mr. Price. Thank you.
    Mr. Tiffany. I yield back, Mr. Chair.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The gentleman from 
Maryland is recognized.
    Mr. Raskin. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    When I was a professor of constitutional law, I used to 
teach my students that freedom of speech is like an apple, and 
everybody wants to take just one bite out of the apple. If 
somebody doesn't like Left-wing speech, there's a bite. If 
somebody doesn't like Right-wing speech, if somebody doesn't 
like feminist speech, and if somebody doesn't like sexist 
speech. Everybody just wants to take one bite, but if we let 
everybody take a bite, at end of the day, there's no apple 
left. It's all gone.
    If you want to defend free speech and you want a society 
that's defined by free speech, you've got to accept even the 
speech you oppose, the speech that you abhor.
    Now, Professor Kaye, we want to try to bring some 
objectivity to the conversation. I looked up the Reporters 
Without Borders rankings of every country in the world, 
according to press freedom: Norway was No. 1 and North Korea 
was number 179. It's like a totalitarian dungeon.
    The U.K. was number 20. The U.S. was number 57 under Trump, 
down from 45 where it was before. Russia, which some people 
here lionize, was at 171, right? If we were going to undertake 
a serious study of the State of press freedom all over the 
world, for example, where should our focus be?
    Mr. Kaye. I appreciate that question. I have a very long 
list that I could highlight.
    Mr. Raskin. Just tell us methodologically quickly how we 
should go about doing it if we want to undertake this in a 
serious way.
    Mr. Kaye. Absolutely. I would really use the lens of what 
do we need as a democracy to be well-informed, to make choices 
about our democracy, and to make choices about our health? What 
do we need?
    We need an open press. We need open government. We need 
access. We absolutely don't want to see websites scrubbed, as 
this administration has done. I would look at it through that 
lens, through the lens of what we need to have a democracy.
    Mr. Raskin. Got you.
    Mr. Farage, first, to be called charming by you, a man of 
your evident erudition and dazzling brilliance, is undoubtedly 
a lifetime achievement award for me. I will hold it closely.
    I wanted to ask you about your commitment to the freedom of 
speech universally. It's a principle that you advocate for 
everyone, not just for people who are in your party or people 
you agree with.
    You said that there should not have been a protest against 
the Gaza war in the U.K. Then, when it went ahead, the police 
refused to shut it down, you called them gutless for not 
shutting it down.
    Do you regret having opposed that, given that there was no 
violence there and there were 700,000 people who wanted to 
express themselves that day?
    Mr. Farage. I have not opposed people standing up and 
protesting in favor of people living in Gaza at all. There was 
one particular day, and it was the Sunday near November 11th, 
which was when we had big memorial services in London. A march 
being allowed to go ahead on that day would have been a 
mistake. Any other day, fine.
    Mr. Raskin. Oh, I see. Who gets to decide that?
    Mr. Farage. Well, actually something that is embedded in 
the country, something that is absolutely fundamental to--
    Mr. Raskin. That's why we have a written Constitution. You 
might take that idea back to the U.K. with you, because the 
freedom of speech applies 365 days a year here under the First 
Amendment, not 364 or 363, depending on some politician's 
heckling the government and telling them to shut down free 
speech.
    Mr. Farage. We have allowed mass pro-Gaza demonstrations in 
London weekend after weekend.
    Mr. Raskin. No thanks to you.
    Mr. Farage. This was one particularly sensitive day. That's 
all.
    Mr. Raskin. I got you. It was a sensitive day. I thought 
that's what the freedom of speech was about. You have a right 
to engage in speech that other people consider offensive or 
insensitive. In any event--
    Mr. Farage. They have every right to do it.
    Mr. Raskin. You have made yourself clear, Mr. Farage.
    Mr. Farage. They can do it 364 days a year if they want. 
Not on that day.
    Mr. Raskin. You have made yourself clear to your 
constituents in Clacton.
    Let me ask you this: You've banned journalists from your 
political events that you disagree with, haven't you?
    Mr. Farage. No. In fact, I'm the only political--
    Mr. Raskin. Really? At your convention, you didn't ban 
journalists and revoke their credentials?
    Mr. Farage. At the average press conference, I take 25 
questions.
    Mr. Raskin. No, that wasn't my question. Mr. Farage, we're 
politicians, so we see what you're doing. I'm asking you a 
direct question.
    Mr. Farage. Well, thank you. I'm very pleased that you do.
    Mr. Raskin. I'm asking you a direct question, and I hope 
you can answer it. Why do you ban journalists who oppose your 
views from coming to your events? Why did you tell your party--
why did you tell the local government not to do interviews with 
your local newspaper?
    Mr. Farage. I am the most open person to any journalist.
    Mr. Raskin. Undoubtedly, you're the handsomest man in the 
world, but I'm asking you a different question.
    Mr. Farage. I do it every day.
    Mr. Raskin. That's not my question. My question for you 
is--and it's legit. Why do you ban journalists that you 
disagree with from your political events, like from your 
convention?
    Mr. Farage. I don't.
    Mr. Raskin. OK. You say you've never done that?
    Mr. Farage. I can't think--if I go back the last 25 years, 
I can't think of banning anybody, but I mean maybe somebody 
else did, but I--
    Mr. Raskin. I see. It was somebody else who did it.
    Mr. Farage. I take more questions from journalists than all 
the other leaders added up together.
    Mr. Raskin. Mr. Price, let me ask you. You're an honest 
man. Do you have any objection to the things you've heard about 
what Donald Trump is doing in the United States of America, 
going after law firms, for example, banning them from Federal 
buildings and Federal courthouses, stripping them of security 
clearance, saying they can never get Federal jobs or contracts 
because he doesn't like something one of the lawyers at the 
firm did.
    Do you think there's a First Amendment problem with that, 
as our courts have found?
    Mr. Price. There's a lot of information you put into that. 
It's good to talk to you again after London--
    Mr. Raskin. Yes. Have you followed that at all?
    Mr. Price. I haven't, I have to be perfectly honest with 
you. No.
    Mr. Raskin. I see. Do you have any problems with anything 
Donald Trump has done with respect to free speech and freedom 
of expression in America? Or you just haven't followed it?
    Mr. Price. There are plenty of people here better informed 
on American matters than I.
    Mr. Raskin. We are. Thank you very much.
    Mr. Chair, thank you for your indulgence. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. I thank the gentleman.
    My guess is Mr. Farage takes press questions probably as 
often as President Trump does. These are two guys who aren't 
afraid to talk to the press and take any question that comes to 
them. We've seen that displayed time and time again.
    The gentleman from California, Mr. Kiley, is recognized.
    Mr. Kiley. Thank you, Mr. Chair. It was an honor to be with 
you and the Ranking Member as we had the chance to see 
firsthand what's going on in the EU and the U.K. Maybe this 
Raskin-Farage show could become a recurring event. It's very 
interesting on both occasions.
    I'd actually like to direct my questions to you, Mr. Price, 
at first. It's good to see you again.
    Those of us on the trip were really alarmed by the ways in 
which the tide is turning against free speech in the U.K. and 
the EU. That there actually was quite a bit of bipartisan 
agreement among the Members of our delegation on a number of 
these issues.
    I was hoping you could give us a little context of what you 
think explains this.
    We understand that not every country needs to have a First 
Amendment or needs to have the exact same standards or the 
exact same exceptions or the exact same way that the law is 
applied. We've always felt it important that we have an 
alliance with our European allies around the issues of freedom 
that stands in contrast to authoritarian regimes around the 
world like in Russia and China, places where they don't have 
free speech. To the extent that these values are fraying among 
our allies, then it really harms our ability to stand up for 
the values of freedom around the world.
    What do you think is going on? How can we sort of 
strengthen our alliance with our European allies around the 
issue of freedom of speech?
    Mr. Price. Thank you, sir.
    Well, what we've seen, sadly, over many decades--and it's 
accelerating--has been a consistent use of overbroad, vague 
laws to crack down on speech that's regarded as provocative or 
unorthodox. I can give you and I have given examples of the 
clients that I'm involved in representing where they've been 
simply speaking about their faith publicly or where they've 
been offering to talk to people.
    Things have reached crisis point, though. This is why it's 
important that Vice President Vance and the administration have 
intervened.
    One thing I would tell you, without divulging any contents 
of conversations, but Representative Raskin and I had quite a 
good conversation about just how bad things had become in 
Europe. I agree with you; I think there is a bipartisan 
realization, certainly on this Committee--and I commend the 
work that it's doing--about the nature of the problem in 
Europe.
    With the DSA, though, we find the European Union stepping 
into speech, regulating it, and bringing that restrictive model 
global. This is where the work that is happening here is 
crucial, because we can't allow that to happen, because we're 
going back to COVID-style censorship all over again.
    Mr. Kiley. Thank you.
    Of course, it's doubly concerning when this actually 
implicates the free-speech rights of Americans. I would hope 
that, moving forward, we can try to work with our counterparts 
in Europe to try to get back to having these shared values 
around freedom of speech and we don't continue to see a 
divergence.
    Mr. Reed, I also wanted to ask you about the DMA, because 
based on--I know you represent smaller app developers, but we 
also spoke with folks who represent Apple and Facebook and 
others, and it's a matter of public record, the way that these 
companies are now sort of uniquely targeted under this law and 
the similar law in the U.K.
    Honestly, it caused me to sort of see some of the ongoing 
negotiations around tariffs and other issues through a somewhat 
different lens. Because the way that American companies are 
being targeted with the DMA really is a tax--or imposes--or is 
a direct transfer of wealth from our country overseas. These 
are some of the sort of nontariff barriers that American 
countries (sic) are now facing. Could you give me your 
perspective on that and the DMA more broadly?
    Mr. Reed. Right. It's ironic that, as you say, it's a 
nontariff trade barrier, but the ultimate biggest loser is 
usually the small- and medium-size companies.
    Earlier, we heard a Member of this Committee talk about 
bills here in the United States. The irony of those who 
supported those bills were also billionaire companies. We joked 
about the fact that it was the trillionaires versus the 
billionaires who went to war. The problem when that happens, if 
any of you have run a small business, is the small guy gets 
crushed.
    What's happening with the DMA in Europe is, their desire to 
put pressure on the U.S. companies means that there are fewer 
services, fewer features, and less trust available for the 
smaller business to take advantage of. That's how we get 
crushed.
    That ends up being, as you say, a nontariff trade barrier, 
because it puts the very companies that could compete with 
these giants at a disadvantage when they have to meet those new 
tests.
    Mr. Kiley. Thank you. That is going to be an important 
issue for us to remain focused on, as to how we can alleviate 
these barriers that our companies are facing that honestly are 
hindering innovation in Europe as well.
    I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields--
    Mr. Kiley. I yield back to the Chair.
    Chair Jordan. I just want to be really clear on the most 
recent situation. Maybe I'll direct this to Mr. Farage.
    Graham Linehan is an Irish citizen who posted something 
while in America and then gets arrested when he goes to the 
U.K. for something--for some, quote, ``offensive'' post online. 
Is that accurate?
    Mr. Farage. That is absolutely right.
    Chair Jordan. Yes. That's where this is all headed. That's 
exactly where this is all headed.
    Mr. Farage. Yes.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman from California who accompanied 
us on the trip, and we were so glad that he did, is recognized 
for five minutes.
    Mr. Correa. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I also appreciate being 
invited on the trip and spending time with you and Ranking 
Member Raskin. Very informative.
    Interesting, looking at the DMA, winners and losers, 
unintended consequences. According to a recent report 
commissioned by the EC, ``The Future of European 
Competitiveness,'' only four of the 50 top tech firms in the 
world are actually in Europe.
    As a Californian, I found it very interesting that a lot of 
the European entrepreneurs move out of Europe, move to the 
U.S., specifically California, to grow, and then possibly move 
back to Europe.
    I'm a Californian, so the health and welfare, the interests 
of California firms are of interest to me. Seeing hundreds of 
millions of dollars in fines and the DMA's nebulous violations 
being levied against California firms, money that could be best 
spent on R&D, in many ways, is very bothersome.
    I care about encouraging California entrepreneurs. We have 
the most successful entrepreneurs in the world today. Yet, they 
are essentially being targeted by the EU and other foreign 
regulations.
    California. This money is better, again, invested in 
creating jobs in California. By the way, a lot of these firms 
that are actually being fined actually pay taxes in California.
    Today, California recently passed up Japan to become the 
fourth-largest economy in the world. California is the number-
one producer of AG products in the world, No. 1 in terms of 
venture capital in the U.S., and number-one manufacturer. We 
pay $100 billion more to the U.S. Federal Government than we 
get back on an annual basis.
    Despite all the challenges we have in California, we 
actually know how to do it right.
    Surprisingly, our workforce--visa holders from other 
countries. Workforce--undocumented workers from around the 
world that actually harvest their crops. Manufacturing: We are 
the top manufacturer in the United States in terms of State. A 
lot of undocumented workers there.
    California, we actually can manage pretty well. The best-
managed State, I would argue, in the Union.
    Mr. Reed, I want to ask you, given your association with 
these small firms, how is the DMA affecting our California 
firms as they try to grow in the European Union?
    Mr. Reed. The ex ante regulation creates barriers of 
entry--
    Mr. Correa. What do you mean by ``ex ante''? Explain that 
to me.
    Mr. Reed. In simple terms, it means that the European Union 
is determining the behavior before the bad act has happened. 
It's before it happens--
    Mr. Correa. They're fining before the actual behavior?
    Mr. Reed. They're not just fining; they're setting the 
rules by which you could be fined. The best way to think about 
it is, they are saying, ``Mother, may I?'' if you remember the 
game ``Mother, may I?'' They are asking companies to go forth 
and say, ``Can we do this?'' Then the Commission says, ``Well, 
yes, you can,'' or ``Yes, you cannot.''
    We traditionally in the United States have taken an ex 
post--meaning, did you deceive someone, did you lie, did you 
cheat, did you steal, and then you're punished. Unfortunately, 
the EU is taking a ``Mother, may I?'' approach rather than a 
punishment approach. That harms California businesses because 
it makes it a lot harder to get in the door.
    Mr. Correa. Mr. Price, you're from Irvine.
    Mr. Price. Sorry--
    Mr. Correa. Mr. Price?
    Mr. Price. Yes. I'm Irvine.
    Mr. Correa. Tell me a little bit about California firms and 
how the DMA--
    Mr. Price. OK.
    Mr. Correa. Well, Irvine, by the way, a lot of biotech and 
high tech?
    Mr. Price. I think you might be referring to Professor 
Kaye.
    Mr. Correa. Mr. Kaye. I'm sorry. Go ahead. Mr. Kaye, 
Irvine.
    Mr. Kaye. Yes. Yes, I teach at the University of California 
at Irvine. I actually wanted to respond to two of the points 
that you're making in part because--
    Mr. Correa. You've got about 20 seconds. Go.
    Mr. Kaye. Thank you. In part, because this hearing is 
entitled as one dealing with censorship and we're spending 
quite a bit of time talking about defending companies, and two 
things I just wanted to mention.
    First, the DMA doesn't specifically discriminate against 
American companies anymore than it does against California 
companies; and second, is that it's important to think about 
the--
    Mr. Correa. Mr. Price, what would you say to that?
    Mr. Price. In relation to discrimination?
    Mr. Correa. Yes.
    Mr. Price. They designed the rules in such a way that they 
almost perfectly encompass American companies, particularly 
under the DSA. If you were studying the rules and they just 
happened to throw a net over a particular target group, you can 
legitimately infer from that this was the intention.
    Mr. Correa. The intention was discrimination?
    Mr. Price. The intention is to throw a dragnet over U.S. 
companies and turn them into a--
    Mr. Correa. The intention is discrimination against 
American firms.
    Mr. Price. That's precisely what the outcome is.
    Mr. Correa. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Before I yield, 
I also have some articles I'd like to submit for the record, if 
I may.
    Chair Jordan. Sure. Yup.
    Mr. Correa. First, a letter by Chair Fitzgerald and myself 
to President Trump dated April 9th of this year outlining our 
concerns with the Digital Markets Act.
    Second, a report by the European Commission dated September 
24th, ``The Future of European Competitiveness,'' which is 
failing to translate into innovation.
    Third, a statement by Chamber of Progress dated February 
10th, ``How Digital Markets Act has become Europe's Digital 
Curtain.''
    Fourth, an article by the Information and Technology 
Foundation dated June 30th, ``Six Ways the DMA is Backfiring on 
Europe.''
    Fifth, an article by Washington Examiner, July 28th, ``EU 
Regulations Impose Heavy Costs on U.S. Companies.''
    Sixth, an article in The Wall Street Journal, ``The Tech 
Industry is Huge--and Europe's Share of It is Very Small.''
    Thank you, sir.
    Chair Jordan. Without objection. Thank you. The gentleman 
yields back. The gentleman from Texas is recognized.
    Mr. Roy. I thank the Chair. I thank you for holding this 
hearing. I thank the witnesses.
    Mr. Price, you referenced Paivi Rasanen earlier, correct?
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir.
    Mr. Roy. Can you just really quick, in 30 seconds, give the 
quick summary of what the facts are behind that issue with 
respect to why she is facing prosecution despite having served 
in parliament and, I believe, as a minister in the government?
    Mr. Price. That's correct, sir.
    Over five years ago, she posted a tweet with a verse from 
scripture, and in that tweet she objected to her church, the 
Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church, using church funds to fund 
the Helsinki Pride Parade. For that, then, criminal proceedings 
were launched against her.
    Mr. Roy. She had been dealing with that for 4-5 years, 
correct?
    Mr. Price. That's correct, sir. Her case is before the 
Supreme Court at the end of October.
    Mr. Roy. Facing jail time.
    Mr. Price. Facing significant fines.
    Mr. Roy. For having expressed her faith with respect to 
issues involving marriage in the context of a Bible verse, 
correct?
    Mr. Price. That's correct, sir.
    Mr. Roy. Now, as the Chair illuminated a moment ago, we've 
got this issue involving Graham Linehan, who here in the United 
States made a joke and then is arrested in the U.K., correct?
    Mr. Price. Yes, he's being arrested--or he was arrested for 
comments that he posted while here.
    Mr. Roy. That's correct, Mr. Farage? You agree?
    Mr. Farage. It is.
    Mr. Roy. That joke had something to do with, as I've looked 
it up, trans-identified males in female-only space, and he made 
some joke about that issue.
    Mr. Farage. That's exactly right.
    Mr. Roy. We've got now someone being arrested for alleged 
transphobia or some sort of hate comment involving a joke on 
another continent.
    Now, in the meantime, we've had Mr. Farage talking about 
Lucy Connolly and her fate, which I understand she got 
sentenced to something like 31-32 months, for having put out a 
social media post. Now, that social media post has been alleged 
to be tied to some incitement. She deleted the post. The post 
was in response to violence and on the heels of a whole lot of 
issues involving crime in the U.K. Whatever the connection is 
we're saying, there is crime in the U.K.
    Now, here's my question, Mr. Farage: How do you feel from 
the standpoint of borders in the U.K.? Are open borders healthy 
for either United States or the U.K.?
    Mr. Farage. No. They're disastrous.
    Mr. Roy. Are they having a deleterious effect with respect 
to crime and culture in the U.K.?
    Mr. Farage. Yes, they are. It's been a debate that's been 
very difficult to have without being screamed at, but we are 
now having that debate.
    Mr. Roy. Now we've got a moment here where we've got 
someone being put in jail for putting out something on social 
media that is allegedly transphobic.
    My question is, I wonder what's going to win out? What's 
going to win out when the questions of Islamophobia and the 
tenets of Islam mash up against transphobia? What will the 
determiners of truth in the U.K. Government decide? What will 
those who make decisions about what we can say and what we 
cannot say do when these worlds collide?
    Would you have any comment on that, Mr. Farage?
    Mr. Farage. In the Lucy Connolly case, it's very 
interesting that this horrific murder of three young girls 
happened. The country was in very deep shock--very deep shock. 
The government deliberately withheld the truth about who the 
perpetrator was, and it led to a sea of speculation.
    It turned out, ultimately, that the man that committed 
those murders was, in fact, U.K.-born, had not come over on a 
boat, as was being said on social media. Just goes to show 
that, actually, however bad the news is, people deserve to know 
the truth about a situation. It stops that frenzy of 
speculation.
    Who's going to win these great battles?
    I think that there is a growing silent majority, certainly 
in my country, who object to the two-tier concept that Lucy 
Connolly gets 31--and, by the way, there were mitigating 
circumstances for what she said with her own personal 
situation. She's arrested very quickly. She's threatened that 
if she pleads not guilty, she'll go straight to prison and be 
on remand until the trial in goodness who knows when. Without 
defending what she said--but she recognized her error in a 
moment of anger and passion and upset, and she withdrew it 3\1/
2\ hours later.
    That the answer, Mr. Roy, is that the silent majority will 
win. The silent majority will win, good will triumph over bad, 
and commonsense will be returned. It won't happen quickly. It 
won't happen quickly. As I've already outlined, there is coming 
down the tracks an Islamophobia law which would divide speech 
even more widely than it is now. In the end, commonsense and 
decency will win.
    Mr. Roy. Is sharia law consistent with Western values?
    Mr. Farage. No.
    Mr. Roy. Thank you. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The gentleman from 
Florida is recognized.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Mr. Farage, thanks for being here, coming across the pond. 
I'm sorry to hear you're leaving the hearing early.
    Mr. Farage. Well, it's not a question of leaving the 
hearing early, but I do have other things to do.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Oh, where are you going?
    Mr. Farage. I'm so sorry about that.
    Mr. Moskowitz. That's OK. Where are you going?
    Mr. Farage. It's not lunch, I promise you.
    Mr. Moskowitz. It's not lunch. You're not going to have 
lunch?
    Mr. Farage. I don't think so, no.
    Mr. Moskowitz. No lunch.
    Mr. Farage. Sad, isn't it?
    Mr. Moskowitz. You're meeting with the President?
    Mr. Farage. I can't remember what the schedule is. It's 
possible--
    Mr. Moskowitz. You can't remember if you're meeting with 
the President.
    Mr. Farage. I'm being very polite, and I'm not going to 
tell you what I'm doing this afternoon. I can assure you that--
    Mr. Moskowitz. This is the free-speech hearing. You're not 
going to tell me what you're doing this afternoon?
    Mr. Farage. Oh, free speech is one thing; discretion is 
quite another too.
    Mr. Moskowitz. OK. All right. You're leaving to have lunch 
with the President. Mr. Farage, I have a question. Have you 
heard about the Epstein thing that's going on here?
    Mr. Farage. I have.
    Mr. Moskowitz. You have. What do you think about it?
    Mr. Farage. I'm not going to give comments on anything 
happening in America. I'm here as a witness--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Perfect.
    Mr. Farage. I'm here as a witness--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Let me--
    Mr. Farage. I'm here as a witness for what is happening in 
the United Kingdom and in the European--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Perfect. Let me just go through it. It's 
been nine months since we've been meeting in these hearings. We 
have not had Pam Bondi here, even though we have jurisdiction 
over the Department of Justice--not Pam Bondi--
    Chair Jordan. Will the gentleman yield?
    Mr. Moskowitz. --not Kash Patel--I will, 100 percent. We'll 
go back and forth. Let me just do my thing and then we'll--
    Chair Jordan. OK. Well, I'm just going to correct what--
Kash Patel is coming in two--I'll give you an extra 10 seconds. 
Kash Patel, the Director of the FBI, is coming in two weeks, 
and the Attorney General is coming in four weeks.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Fantastic. Still, we're not doing that this 
week, the week we're having votes on the Epstein thing. Pam 
Bondi gives the influencers, these Republican influencers, a 
binder. It says, ``Part 1 of the Epstein files.'' I don't know 
if you saw it. It was quite spectacular. The Attorney General 
then says, ``the Epstein list is on her desk.'' Then, DOJ 
issues a memo, says, ``there is no list.'' Do you have any 
questions about any of that?
    We've had no hearings on any of that, at all, that, ``the 
list is on my desk,'' then ``there is no list,'' then ``we gave 
binders to Republican influencers.'' This Committee has had no 
questions on any of how that transpired at the Department of 
Justice. Then--hold on.
    Mr. Farage. Well, it sounds like you're going to in the 
next few weeks and that's a jolly good thing.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Hold on. No, no, no--oh, Mr. Farage. Mr. 
Farage, we can talk soon, but not yet, OK?
    Mr. Farage. All right.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Then, the President comes out and says, 
``the whole thing's a hoax.'' He blasts his own base. He blames 
Barack Obama. He hasn't been President for a very long time.
    The Republicans in Committee, vote against the release in 
the Rules Committee. Then, Republicans refuse to go back in the 
Rules Committee because they're getting blasted for their vote, 
getting crushed by their own base. Congress leaves a day early.
    The administration sends the Deputy Attorney General to 
meet with Maxwell in jail. He happens to be Trump's former 
personal attorney. She says something favorable about the 
President. Miraculously, she gets transferred to a minimum-
security prison. The President starts talking about how he has 
the right to pardon her if he wanted to. The leaks to The Wall 
Street Journal then stop.
    We come back from break. We have the Massie petition. Comer 
does a document dump where 97 percent of these documents are 
already public. How long has he had those documents? Why hasn't 
he released them for the last six weeks? Does it the day of the 
vote.
    Republicans drop a nonbinding resolution trying to kill the 
Massie discharge petition. The White House said passing the 
Massie discharge petition is a ``hostile act.'' Wow. That's a 
lot of distraction, deflection, and misinformation. Wait, wait. 
Passing a discharge petition to release the Epstein files, the 
White House said, ``would be a hostile act.'' Nope, we have no 
questions about that. Why is it that we're spending so much 
political capital to keep this list from coming out? Do you 
think the list should come out? Do you think we should know the 
people who dealt with Mr. Epstein, Mr. Farage?
    Mr. Farage. I thought I was coming to a hearing on free 
speech, not process.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Oh. Listen--but here's the good--
    Mr. Farage. It sounds like you're discussing process--
    Mr. Moskowitz. No, no. Do you think the list should come 
out?
    Mr. Farage. I have no opinion on it. I don't know at all--
    Mr. Moskowitz. We have victims that were sexually abused by 
potentially people in power, and we don't know who's on the 
list.
    Mr. Farage. I'm very happy to discuss that with you another 
time--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Hold on, Mr. Farage. We don't know who's on 
the list. We don't know who's on the list. We don't know if the 
President is or is not. I'm not going to say wheather he is or 
isn't. I'm just going to say, these are weird behaviors. We 
don't know that there aren't other people in Congress that are 
on the list, right? We have no idea.
    Do you think the list should come out? Do you think people 
in power should be held to account for these victims who have 
been sexually abused and assaulted? Do you think the list 
should come out?
    Mr. Farage. I'm very happy to come to a different hearing 
where you talk about legal process--
    Mr. Moskowitz. OK.
    Mr. Raskin. Will the gentleman yield for a quick question?
    Mr. Moskowitz. I will.
    Mr. Raskin. Were you aware that he has already called for 
the Epstein file to be released?
    Mr. Moskowitz. Oh, I--
    Mr. Raskin. It has been reported that he has called for it 
to be released.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Oh, yes, right here. Just to refresh your 
memory I happen to have this.
    Mr. Farage. Yes, but that's not what we're--
    Mr. Moskowitz. How random.
    Mr. Farage. That is not--look, you could ask me, if you 
like, about Social Security policy--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Do you agree with yourself?
    Mr. Farage. We are here--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Do you agree with yourself--
    Mr. Farage. We are here to discuss free speech.
    Mr. Moskowitz. Hold on. It's awkward for your lunch after 
this? Do you agree with yourself?
    Mr. Farage. No, it isn't at all.
    Mr. Moskowitz. OK. Mr. Chair, I'm just curious. This 
Committee has jurisdiction over the Department of Justice.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman's time has--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Why have we allowed Comer to cover this up 
for the last couple of months?
    Chair Jordan. As I said--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Why is this Committee not taking 
jurisdiction?
    Chair Jordan. I said six weeks ago that we will have the 
FBI Director in, we will have the Attorney General in, and we 
are doing that in two weeks. You can ask all--you can go 
through that whole list--that whole list. You can do whatever 
you want to do with--I've got lots of questions for the FBI 
Director, including the whistleblower who came forward and told 
him that Adam Schiff leaked classified information. I want to 
ask him about that as well, as well as the issues you all want 
to ask him about.
    That's why he's coming, so we can ask all these questions 
and follow the process, as Mr. Farage just talked about.
    The gentleman from Virginia--
    Mr. Moskowitz. Mr. Chair, unanimous consent--
    Chair Jordan. Unanimous consent?
    Mr. Moskowitz. I'd like to enter the Politico article into 
the record that Mr. Farage said the Epstein files should be 
released.
    Chair Jordan. Without objection. The gentleman from 
Virginia is recognized.
    Mr. Cline. I thank the Chair. I want to talk about 
censorship tools that are being used by Europe and 
protectionist measures that have major consequences for U.S. 
companies and free expression worldwide. I'm glad to have you 
all here to get your views on those issues.
    Mr. Farage, you've called the Online Safety Act a 
borderline dystopian censorship regime. Many agree, including 
myself, that the law badly overreaches.
    One of the most serious criticisms is that it empowers 
Ofcom to undermine encryption and open the door to not just 
government surveillance of posts online and public statements 
but private messages, raising alarms not just in the U.K., but 
beyond U.K. borders. Vice President J.D. Vance has warned this 
could threaten Americans' privacy as well.
    Do you recognize that this is not just a domestic issue for 
the U.K., but a global one? If you become Prime Minister, what 
assurances would you give allies that the U.K. will not 
undermine end-to-end privacy standards?
    Mr. Farage. You have my absolute word that a Reform 
government will repeal the Online Safety Act and will go right 
back, actually, to legislation back to 2010 under which these 
whole concepts of hate speech have begun to be interpreted in 
U.K. law, and we will do that.
    Do we want to protect kids? This is the big question. Yes, 
we do. We need to find means. We need to find ways. I half-
suggested earlier that hardware could be part of the solution. 
Yes, we want to protect--to encourage and let free speech 
flourish.
    Mr. Cline. You've said Reform UK has access to some of the 
best tech minds to design alternatives. How do you propose to 
balance protecting children without scanning private messages 
or weakening encryption?
    Mr. Farage. Well, as I've said, I don't have all the 
answers to this, but the British Prime Minister says he has got 
the answers to this. Well, if it's about protecting kids, why 
does the legislation give Ofcom the most extraordinary and, 
frankly, arbitrary powers? Why is there the establishment, 
under the act, of an elite police force unit to monitor what 
you've said online?
    It's far better to be honest and say we don't have the 
perfect solutions than to pretend we have with legislation that 
is a sledgehammer that misses the nut.
    Mr. Cline. Thank you.
    Mr. Price, the EU's Digital Services Act imposes liability 
for so-called systemic risks. How does that chill religious or 
political speech? Do you see conflicts with First Amendment 
principles?
    Mr. Price. Yes, that's correct. The systemic risk provision 
constitutes a form of content moderation that they are 
misrepresenting, frankly, in their letters to you.
    Where the systemic risk provisions talk about, in fact, 
damage to what they call ``civil discourse''--and we've already 
seen prosecutions, including clients of ours, who have been 
prosecuted for, among other things, praying silently, 
discussing the differences between Christianity and Islam, 
tweeting a verse from the Bible.
    If these constitute systemic risks to civil discourse, the 
EU has the power in terms of this content moderation provision 
to step in.
    Mr. Cline. ``Damage to civil discourse'' seems a little 
broad, doesn't it.
    Mr. Price. Absolutely.
    Mr. Cline. Mr. Reed, the EU's Digital Markets Act and the 
U.K.'s Digital Markets, Competition, and Consumers Act are sold 
as procompetition, but don't compliance costs just burden small 
app developers?
    Mr. Reed. Absolutely. The problem is that--it's 
interesting, as you talked about, how do you do a better job? 
You asked, how do we do a better job to protect children? One 
of the ways we do it is by empowering parents to be good 
parents.
    One of our deepest concerns is, by removing some of the 
capability of the platforms to curate and provide information 
to parents about what applications do through a clear, forward 
interface that they see every day, that's useful, it makes it 
harder to parent and harder to know what apps are on your kid's 
device and harder for you to control it.
    We absolutely see that not only are there problems with it 
on encryption, which we agree with you 100 percent, but we also 
think it weakens our ability as parents to be in charge of the 
devices our children are using.
    Mr. Cline. Yes, these rules don't help parents and 
consumers, if you will. They just shift power from platforms, 
parents, and consumers to regulators, correct?
    Mr. Reed. Correct.
    Mr. Cline. Do these regimes create a level playing field 
for U.S. firms, or do they advantage European competitors at 
the expense of American innovation?
    Mr. Reed. Well, the original thought behind the DMA was 
that Europe had not been successful in creating their own 
industry, as was alluded to by several other Members of 
Congress, and Congressman Correa noted it as well.
    Europe's economic potential has slowed, while the United 
States has grown incredibly. We've gone from almost equal in 
2008 to a 50-percent increase in the size of the U.S. economy 
between 2008 and now.
    We think a lot of it comes from the small technology 
companies that have been creating amazing devices, amazing 
products, and amazing applications that you're all using. We 
are disappointed that there aren't the same opportunities for 
the U.S.--for our EU members.
    Mr. Cline. Thanks. I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The gentlelady 
from Pennsylvania is recognized.
    Ms. Scanlon. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    For years, political extremists, including some of our 
colleagues, have claimed, without evidence, that so-called 
conservative speech is being canceled. The speech at issue is 
not conservative political speech; it's hate speech, including 
incitement to violence, threats and harassment of particular 
people or groups, and lies about almost everything, from 
election results to healthcare. There's nothing conservative 
about any of that.
    Today's hearing appears to be one more attempt by these 
extremists to claim victimhood, promote falsehoods, and 
normalize radical ideas, all while attacking others.
    Today, our Republican colleagues claim that our European 
allies pose the biggest threat to Americans' free speech today. 
Seriously? There is an all-out assault on the First Amendment 
in the U.S., but it's coming from inside the house--the White 
House, the Executive Branch of our own country.
    For the past eight months, our Republican colleagues have 
done nothing but cheer on the administration's un-American 
attacks. Because the truth is, they're all for free speech, but 
only if it's the speech they agree with.
    I'd say, if you really want to talk about censorship, let's 
talk about how this administration, with the support of our 
MAGA colleagues, has tried to strangle speech and ideas that it 
doesn't agree with when that speech comes from the free press, 
college campuses, law firms and judges, library books, the 
Smithsonian museums, responsible investors, scientists, 
dedicated employees with deep expertise, and more.
    We have seen this White House use Executive Orders, threats 
and intimidation, illegal withholding of Federal funding, raids 
by masked and armed police, and even sending military troops 
onto American streets to shut down opposition to this 
administration's policies.
    Professor Kaye, you are an internationally recognized 
expert on freedom of expression and have studied the growing 
assault on free speech and civil society around the world. In 
your testimony, you said that the situation in the U.S. raises 
serious alarms. Can you elaborate on that?
    Mr. Kaye. Yes. Well, everything that--thank you for the 
question.
    Everything that you just mentioned is alarming. The 
assaults on the press, on universities, on public protest--all 
those things are the kinds of things that historically the 
United States has fought against.
    Ms. Scanlon. Uh-huh.
    Mr. Kaye. All those things are very problematic.
    That one way to think about them, perhaps--and it's useful 
in this Committee, actually, in the context of this Committee--
is to think of those things that the Trump Administration is 
doing as a contrast to something like the DSA, right?
    The DSA sees a problem, which is a problem shared or 
perceived on both sides of the aisle, which is massive platform 
power--
    Ms. Scanlon. Uh-huh.
    Mr. Kaye. --and also, the kinds of content that you alluded 
to. The DSA doesn't create any new rules that allow either the 
European Commission or countries to censor. It is a 
transparency regime. It's a risk assessment regime. It's 
actually researcher access. It's actually a tool to give us 
information about what's happening online.
    That's in just sharp contrast to the kind of issues that 
we're seeing in this country, which are very much focused on 
criticism and content.
    Ms. Scanlon. Yes. My colleague, Ms. Jayapal, talked about 
the fact that we had a very robust investigation of Big Tech in 
prior Congresses, which has kind of been shut down by a new 
alliance between Big Tech and the Republican Party.
    It is about dealing with the real issues and the very real 
power that these Big Tech platforms have and trying to provide 
tools for ordinary citizens to fight back against 
disinformation or harmful content.
    Can you talk a little bit about that?
    Mr. Kaye. Yes, absolutely.
    If you think about one tool that the DSA offers, it's this 
assurance that individuals will be able to challenge, to 
appeal, content moderation decisions. That is not something 
that is allowed or mandated by law in the United States.
    One other thing just to mention in this connection: I think 
Mr. Farage mentioned--and it's really just to highlight how 
hard some of these questions might be. Mr. Farage has suggested 
the possibility that hardware could be part of a solution to 
deal with children's access to harmful information. There's 
something possibly there, but it's another form of censorship.
    Ms. Scanlon. Uh-huh.
    Mr. Kaye. We should just recognize that restrictions are on 
the table in the United States, in the U.K., elsewhere.
    Chair Jordan. The gentlelady's time--
    Mr. Kaye. I think the Europeans have adopted an approach 
that makes quite a bit of sense--
    Chair Jordan. The gentlelady's time has--we're trying to 
get to as many Members as possible. The gentlelady's time has 
expired.
    The gentleman from New Jersey is recognized.
    Ms. Scanlon. Thank you.
    Chair Jordan. Mr. Farage has to leave in a few minutes, so 
we want to get to as many Members as possible.
    Mr. Van Drew. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Before I begin, my friend who's not here now, Mr. Moskowitz 
from Florida--there's kind of a little trick in debating. When 
you're losing the debate on the issue, you change the issue. 
This is not about Epstein. It has nothing to do with that. As 
the Chair so correctly said, the Attorney General's going to be 
here, the FBI Director's going to be here, and we can talk 
about it until the cows come home.
    Second, I believe it was you, Mr. Farage, that said COVID 
changed our world in many ways, more than just the biological 
disease. What it did to us psychologically, governmentally, and 
philosophically was really bad. We're still not out of it yet 
because of what happened then.
    We're losing our freedoms. We are losing our freedoms. It's 
not because of an American Congress. It's not because of 
American courts. It's not because of American Republicans. I'm 
going to even say it's not because of American Democrats. It is 
due to bureaucrats in Brussels and in London--sorry--and in 
other places as well. It's wrong. It's un-American.
    I am unabashedly--and we all are here, hopefully--pro-
American. We should be protecting our citizens. Instead, we're 
watching foreign bureaucrats come to our country and try to 
force United States companies to censor humor, satire, and news 
they don't like. It's backward, it's bizarre, it's perverse, 
and it's weird. That's what we would call it in New Jersey; 
it's just weird. It's not good. It's the opposite of everything 
that the United States of America fought and stands for.
    It's a globalist mindset. We can all talk about the issues, 
but I'm going to keep talking about globalism versus American 
except-ionalism and individuality. I believe very much, 
sincerely, that the whole battle that's going on now with the 
Right and the Left, what's happening in Great Britain, what's 
happening around the world, what's happening in the United 
States, is very much that argument--individuality and, in our 
case here in the States, Americanism, exceptionalism. Or is it 
globalism?
    The EU's Digital Services Act and the U.K.'s Online Safety 
Act are the pinnacle examples of how upside-down things have 
gotten in the effort to globalize our society. That is the 
ultimate showdown. It is resulting in our loss of our freedom, 
losing our influence. The only winner here are some countries 
in Europe, Russia, China, and others.
    Europe is spending their time attacking American tech 
companies, dictating how our platforms operate, how our 
technology operates, and punishing people for exhibiting free 
speech. The European model--I'm sorry if I offend anyone, but 
it is wrong.
    We fought a revolution to defend ourselves. Men and women 
pledged their lives, their treasure, their sacred honor so that 
they wouldn't have to go through this. We never thought that 
Americans would be stripped of that. That's why this moment is 
so serious. It's more serious than most Americans and people 
realize right now.
    For generations, we thought if we were ever attacked it was 
going to be a nuclear holocaust, we thought it was going to be 
the domino theory, we thought it was going to be world wars, we 
thought it was so many things. I maintain it's this. If we lose 
our First Amendment rights and our freedom of speech, we have 
lost everything, and nothing else matters.
    Internet technology is being used as a vehicle to make this 
happen.
    I have a question for Mr. Farage and Mr. Price. This 
hearing is really good, and I'm sure we're going to have some 
other hearings. More than hearings and talking about it, what 
is it, tangibly--this is a hard question--that we can do to 
stop it? What is it?
    Mr. Farage, I'll start with you.
    Mr. Farage. The debate we've had here--nobody here from any 
side of the debate has told me that the Online Safety Act is a 
wonderful piece of legislation right across the spectrum. 
You're having your own internal debates about free speech in 
America--right, healthy--and what this Committee is for.
    I want to make this argument: I know these companies are 
very big and very powerful, many of the tech firms, but 
governments talk to each other, yes? It needs the American 
administration and businesses to have an honest conversation.
    Brussels, you won't get a hearing. They are fundamentally 
anti-American, frankly. I was there for 20 years; I saw it.
    I do think there is a conversation to be had with the 
British Government about the shape of their legislation and the 
impact it can have on American individuals, their liberty, and 
American companies.
    I am calling for, as a result of what's happened--it's 
clearly got--the legislation's clearly doing the wrong thing. 
It is cause for proper intergovernmental debate.
    Mr. Van Drew. I hope that we have--and, by the way, we have 
censorship in America. Watch ABC, NBC, and CBS. I'm in the 
meetings, I'm in the discussion, I see and hear what happens. 
My wife has Channel 6 on, which drives me nuts, at home, and it 
has nothing to do with the damn stuff that actually happened. 
That's the truth. We have it already, and I pray to God we 
don't lose America.
    Mr. Chair, indulgence, then I'll shut up. Mr. Price didn't 
get a chance.
    Chair Jordan. Quickly.
    Mr. Van Drew. Yes, sir.
    Mr. Price. You talked about putting pressure on--and I 
agree that Brussels is a cold house for free speech. A lot of 
the regulation is actually happening in my own country, in 
Ireland, in Dublin, where a lot of the tech companies are 
headquartered, their European headquarters. It's the Irish 
Media Commissioner, ``Coimisiun na Mean'' in the Irish 
language, which is the ground zero, really, for a lot of this 
regulation.
    Here's where the U.S. can do a lot, because there are 
strong bilateral relationships between Ireland and the United 
States, is to put pressure on the Irish Government to stop the 
bullying of tech companies. Already, X is in the Irish Supreme 
Court soon against the Irish Media Commissioner, so they're 
already starting to crack down. I would hope that you use your 
good offices here to put pressure on the Irish.
    Mr. Van Drew. Yep.
    Chair Jordan. The gentlelady from--
    Mr. Goldman. Mr. Chair, I have a point of parliamentary 
inquiry.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman is recognized.
    Mr. Goldman. Why is the witness leaving this hearing early 
and certainly without--
    Chair Jordan. Because he has an engagement he told us 
about. This is not unusual. It's happened before under Democrat 
leadership of the Committee and under Republican leadership of 
the Committee.
    We're trying to get through as many people as we can.
    You've had many of your witnesses who did not ask Mr. 
Farage a question--many of your colleagues. You could've 
coordinated with them. You didn't go in order. We didn't 
necessarily go in order because we wanted to get as many people 
up front asking Mr. Farage questions.
    Mr. Goldman. Could we ask him if he would be willing to 
stay for--
    Chair Jordan. That is totally up to the witness, but if the 
witness has to go somewhere, I understand. We were glad that he 
came. We were glad that we had a chance to visit with him in 
Europe, so--you could've gone on that trip and had a chance to 
interact with--
    Mr. Goldman. I wasn't invited, but next time--
    Chair Jordan. Oh, you were definitely invited. Everyone was 
invited from the Democrat side. The whole Committee was 
invited. The Chair now recognizes the gentlelady from Georgia 
for questions.
    Mr. Farage, if you can stay longer, we would definitely 
welcome that.
    Mr. Farage. When I Chaired this event in the Palace of 
Westminster, we had an hour for it, because time was very 
tight.
    Chair Jordan. Yep.
    Mr. Farage. That was perhaps the source of the slight 
disagreement Mr. Raskin and I had.
    Mr. Raskin. See, a little bit of confusion on that.
    Mr. Farage. We would've given this--
    Mr. Raskin. Each side got an hour, but the whole thing was 
limited to an hour. Your side went, and then you called it 
off--
    Mr. Farage. I was given the instruction--this we've been 
given three hours, and I apologize, but, no, I can't stay 
longer.
    Chair Jordan. OK.
    Mr. Goldman. I could send the Constitution down to the 
White House for the President to read it while--
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman is not recognized. The 
gentlelady from Georgia has five minutes to ask her questions 
while Mr. Farage is still here, and then he will leave when he 
has to leave.
    Ms. McBath. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you to our 
witnesses today.
    Our First Amendment rights, as you can see, are definitely 
under attack. Words are very powerful tools, as you've heard 
them being used here in this hearing. This administration has 
gone out of their way to retaliate against our students, news 
agencies, and others who express views that don't align with 
their extreme agenda by using lawsuits, eliminating funding, 
and even going so far as to send out a memo with a list of 
restricted words that can't even be used.
    The actions of this administration have been ruled against 
in court time and time again by judges from both parties on a 
basis of abusing our constitutional rights.
    From freezing funding for colleges because they do not bend 
to this administration's will, to removing programs that are 
designed to expand student understanding and access in 
education--which, I'd like to add increases future 
opportunities for our Republican constituents as well--and 
using Federal investigation powers to retaliate, we are 
watching the First Amendment be manipulated in ways that this 
Nation hoped that they would never see.
    Hear it from the judges who have ruled against government 
bullies who attempt to violate the rights of the American 
people.
    The U.S. District Judge Sooknanan found First Amendment 
violations in the government investigation into Media Matters, 
which she stated is likely to succeed in its claim that the FTC 
was using this investigation as a retaliation against the 
watchdog group for claims against a prominent Trump supporter, 
a clear violation of First Amendment protections. The cases, 
they just go on and on and on.
    U.S. District Judge McFadden, a Trump appointee, ordered 
that the Associated Press's access to the White House press be 
reinstated, ruling that denying their access because of 
differing viewpoints was a clear violation of the First 
Amendment.
    If the Majority want to talk about attacks on the First 
Amendment in other parts of the world, they need to start right 
here in our administration.
    The Constitution is the foundation of this country. It is 
not meant to be trampled on for political or for business 
advantage.
    When you love something, you want to protect it, and you 
want to do what's best for it. You want to improve it. This 
means people will speak out and disagree on actions taken in 
their country and offer critiques to our leaders and, yes, the 
politicians. That's a constitutionally protected right.
    If the First Amendment is our guardrail, then this 
administration is truly trying to push us off the road. This 
government should be strong enough to accept any criticism 
without violating people's rights and offending the man in the 
White House.
    Professor Kaye, I have a question, just one question, for 
you. Based on what you've seen since this January, if our 
colleagues in the Majority continue to pretend that our First 
Amendment rights are not under attack here at home, what could 
this mean for our country within the next three years?
    Mr. Kaye. Thank you for that question.
    As we look at the current moment and the current situation 
for our media, for our universities, for people's access to 
information generally, particularly access to health 
information, it portends really very problematic and dark days 
ahead. Will we be able to have access to information that makes 
us informed parents or informed citizens able to make voting 
decisions? That's the kind of future that we should expect if 
we don't recognize this situation.
    That the tenor of the conversation could at least recognize 
that there are violations of fundamental rights to freedom of 
expression by this government right now--at least recognize it. 
I know that Democrats in the last five years called out the 
Biden Administration from time to time when it did things that 
it thought was inconsistent with free-speech values. Having 
that kind of honest discussion and then some real constraint is 
where the Committee should be heading.
    Ms. McBath. Thank you so much.
    I encourage everyone that sees nothing wrong with this 
administration's retaliatory attacks on expressions of our 
First Amendment to consider just how much you are willing to 
give up to appease this man in the White House.
    At this time, I'd like to yield the remainder of my time to 
our Ranking Member.
    Chair Jordan. There's no time left to yield. I thank the 
gentlelady. The gentlelady yields back.
    I do have to run to another commitment. I will be back in 
20 minutes. We will have Mr. Knott take over as Chair.
    Mr. Farage, if you have to leave, I look forward to 
visiting with you sometime later, hopefully--
    Mr. Farage. I do, but thank you very much for--
    Mr. Goldman. Mr. Farage, could I--
    Chair Jordan. Thank you for your testimony.
    Mr. Goldman. Could I just ask you to stay for--one more, 
Mr. Farage?
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman from Alabama is recognized for 
five minutes.
    Mr. Moore. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Mr. Farage, I enjoyed Milwaukee at the Harley-Davidson 
plant with you. That was a great evening. All right. A question 
for both Mr. Price or Mr. Farage.
    One requirement for speech to be censored as a false 
communication offense under the OSA is that speech must cause 
nontrivial psychological or physical harm. What is nontrivial 
psychological harm?
    Mr. Farage. I honestly don't know. That's the problem with 
this legislation. It's so open-ended it could mean anything. It 
leaves this entirely in the hands of local police forces to 
make their decisions.
    The other disturbing element of this is that much within 
this act can be changed on a whim by a government minister, or, 
at the other end, it can be interpreted by Ofcom in ways that 
it sees fit.
    This is not good legislation. It's totally open-ended. It 
could literally mean whatever you want it to mean.
    Mr. Moore. Local law enforcement, I guess, can make that 
decision on who they decide to prosecute and who they do not. 
Have we seen it tending one way or the other? I know we've 
talked about a couple of cases here. Are there certain people 
being targeted, do you think, with OSA?
    Mr. Farage. Well, that's the fear, isn't it? The fear is 
that certain communities will be acted on more harshly than 
other communities. That creates the impression of a two-tier 
country. That breaks down trust in law and order, the 
democratic system, and everything else.
    What was interesting overnight was that the boss, Sir Mark 
Rowley, the boss of the Metropolitan Police, has said, look, we 
arrested this guy at Heathrow because we had to under the law, 
but they've thrown it back to the government to say, come on, 
could you just define more clearly what you want this 
legislation to mean?
    That's why I think it's rotten legislation. It impacts us 
in ways that we can't yet foresee. It impacts, potentially, 
Americans and American businesses. It needs to be gotten rid 
of, and we need to start again.
    Mr. Moore. Mr. Price, talking about affecting American 
businesses, I guess Europe is 440 million people, the U.S. is 
300 million people. How do these companies--what do you see 
down the road for these platforms, these social media 
platforms, these companies that feel like they have to try and 
comply if they're going to do business in Europe, if, in fact, 
we don't repeal this OSA thing? Which, I hope Mr. Farage is 
able to do that with his leadership at some point in the near 
future.
    How does this play out for our companies, Mr. Price, and 
for free speech in Europe in general?
    Mr. Price. Well, on the corporate side, they're facing a 
really complicated piece of legislation. As Mr. Farage 
outlined, the provisions that are confusing in the Online 
Safety Act in the United Kingdom, there are similarly extremely 
confusing provisions in the Digital Services Act. The mindset 
has to be one normally of compliance.
    One company has stood up to this whole regime and is 
challenging it at every level, and that's X. I hope others join 
and do the same, because the European Commission, though, 
really has been quite threatening. You'll recall the Thierry 
Breton letter, of course, about Elon Musk's interview with 
then-candidate President Trump.
    You'll also see that other Members of the Commission have 
made threatening remarks against companies, as well, on these 
so-called voluntary codes of conduct. When X and Google left 
one of the codes of conduct, a European Commissioner said, 
``Well, of course, they are voluntary, but we note that you've 
left them, and we'll still hold you on the obligations.'' You 
have Thierry Breton saying, as well, ``You can run, but you 
can't hide'' if you leave the codes of conduct.
    The whole thing is designed to force compliance, and the 
hammer that they have, of course, is these enormous, crippling 
fines.
    Mr. Moore. It's 10 percent on global revenue, if I 
understand correctly. For some of these companies, that's a 
pretty tremendous fine.
    Mr. Price. Absolutely, yes, of turnover.
    Mr. Moore. I guess, as we're looking through this, it's 
almost like people could claim that they were offended or hurt, 
that you hurt their feelings, and then all of a sudden you're a 
target of this investigation.
    Is that right, Mr. Farage? Is that kind of--
    Mr. Farage. Yes. Frankly, under free speech, we should be 
allowed to cause offense. I should be able to offend you, you 
should be able to offend me, provided we know what the limits 
are. The limits I think we fully understand--of incitement, for 
example. Then, we have to get back to a much freer way of 
living. If people say rude things and we don't like them, well, 
we just ignore them and get on with our lives.
    Mr. Moore. Like today when you were accused of Russian 
collusion, I guess. That was pretty offensive--
    Mr. Farage. Well, I remember the Russian hoax very, very 
well. We had shades of it earlier on this morning, but not much 
more than that, I am pleased to say.
    Mr. Moore. That's what I was thinking.
    Well, thank you. Mr. Chair, with that, I'll yield back.
    Mr. Farage. Thank you. We're going to have to go, Mr. 
Chair, but thank you very much--
    Mr. Goldman. Mr. Farage, you can blame it on me. One more. 
Oh, you're avoiding me.
    Mr. Knott. [Presiding.] Mr. Farage, thank you. The Chair 
now recognizes the gentleman from New York, Mr. Goldman.
    Mr. Goldman. I'm sorry to see you leave, Mr. Farage. I 
actually had much that we agree on and was looking forward to 
your testimony, because it's very nice and refreshing to hear 
from my GOP colleagues that they are worried about 
authoritarianism. Mr. Biggs and Mr. McClintock both said that 
earlier.
    I imagine, given what's going on in this country, when the 
President is sending the military into American cities, is 
weaponizing the Department of Justice to investigate his 
enemies, requiring loyalty oaths from all Federal workers, at 
risk of otherwise being fired--the list goes on and on--it is 
reassuring to hear that the Republicans who have remained 
stone-silent about Trump's authoritarian takeover of our 
government here are actually concerned about authoritarianism.
    I found it really heartening that Mr. Van Drew said, and I 
quote, ``If we lose our First Amendment rights, we lose 
everything.''
    Now, in his opening statement, Mr. Farage said, quote, 
``When the government starts regulating speech, it is rarely 
those that agree with the government who find themselves in 
court.''
    Mr. Farage, I'll ask you the question: Is that similar to 
your concern about suppressing speech that disagrees with the 
government? Oh. Mr. Farage has left.
    Well, Mr. Raskin, I will then maybe just--you can stand in 
for Mr. Farage for a minute here. I know you are a champion of 
free speech. I'm not sure it's the same free speech that Mr. 
Farage is supporting.
    If this concern about the government regulating speech is 
because it is rarely those that agree with the government who 
find themselves in court, then you would think that Mr. Farage 
and all our Republican colleagues would be very, very concerned 
if an administration here in the United States was 
investigating criminally individuals who made the colossal 
mistake of speaking out against the President.
    That would be a clear violation of Mr. Farage's principle. 
Is that right?
    Mr. Raskin. He was talking about the importance of 
political dissent. This is a test, Mr. Goldman of our 
constitutional patriotism. To what extent are we willing to 
speak up for people who are the targets of government 
repression even if we don't agree with what they're saying?
    A great example of that is our colleague Congresswoman 
McIver from New Jersey. I would hope that in a comparable 
circumstance I would stand up for a Republican colleague who 
tries to exercise his or her oversight rights by going to a 
government facility on a prearranged visit and then gets caught 
up in the chaos and confusion outside, and they want to send 
her to jail for 30 years.
    I did stand up for our colleague from New York--I'm spacing 
on his name Mr. Santos--
    Mr. Goldman. Mr. Santos. Our friend.
    Mr. Raskin. --because they wanted to expel him without his 
having a conviction or an ethics process, and I said that 
wasn't fair. I passed a micro-test there. I would hope some of 
our colleagues would--
    Mr. Goldman. I agree.
    Mr. Raskin. --agree and don't prosecute our colleagues just 
for doing their jobs.
    Mr. Goldman. Well, let's talk about that, because that is 
exactly what this Department of Justice is doing.
    Recently, we heard publicly--which would ordinarily never 
happen. The Department of Justice does not say publicly--they 
don't confirm that there are any investigations by anyone until 
there's an indictment, because that person or those individuals 
can't defend themselves. Now, we know that Senator Adam Schiff, 
who led the first impeachment of Donald Trump, is under 
investigation by the Department of Justice.
    New York State Attorney General Letitia James, who filed a 
lawsuit against Donald Trump and his business, she is now under 
investigation.
    Miles Taylor, who literally did the only thing that he did 
was write an op-ed and a book criticizing the President of the 
United States, he is under criminal investigation.
    Chris Krebs, whose offense I think was to say that the 2020 
election was the most secure ever, he is under investigation.
    John Bolton, who has criticized the President, gets his 
house raided.
    Lisa Cook, the Fed Governor, is now under investigation for 
mortgage fraud, I guess because she doesn't want to lower 
rates.
    The degree to which this government is suppressing speech 
that simply opposes the President's views should make Mr. 
Farage and every single one of my Republican colleagues speak 
out in favor of the First Amendment, and yet we have heard 
nothing.
    There is still time, my friends. I yield back.
    Mr. Knott. Thank you, sir. The Chair now recognizes the 
gentlelady from Wyoming.
    Ms. Hageman. Benjamin Franklin said over 270 years ago,

        Freedom of speech is a principal pillar of a free government. 
        When this support is taken away, the Constitution of a free 
        society is dissolved, and tyranny is erected on its ruins. An 
        evil magistrate entrusted with power to punish for words would 
        be armed with a weapon, the most destructive and terrible. 
        Under pretense of pruning off the exuberant branches, he would 
        be apt to destroy the tree.

    Mr. Farage talked in his opening statement that--noted that 
Europe's regulatory regime risks exporting restrictive 
standards that could violate Americans' constitutional rights. 
I'd like to expose that and discuss that a little bit further.
    He noted that the oh-so-benignly titled Online Safety Act 
exemplified this regulatory model. The OSA is marketed as a 
measure to protect children online, but it is clearly being 
used as a means to actually impose government-backed 
censorship, especially speech which is critical of government 
policy.
    As an egregious example, we have learned that the OSA has 
been used against Katie Lam, MP for Weald of Kent, to block 
videos of her speeches made in Parliament critical of the 
fallout from the country's immigration policies.
    Mr. Price, are you familiar with the circumstance where 
actual speeches in Parliament or other public figures are--
their speeches are being censored by the government under this 
claim of protecting minors or protecting people from hearing 
the speech?
    Mr. Price. I'm familiar with censorship of public protests. 
That's already happened in the United Kingdom. The Online 
Safety Act has placed blocks on those to so-called--to protect 
children--that's the claim--but it has prevented adults from 
accessing it as well.
    Ms. Hageman. The Times has also reported that using the 
Communications Act of 2003 and the Malicious Communications Act 
of 1988, there have been--37 police forces have made over 
12,000 arrests in 2023 alone, which is the equivalent of 33 a 
day, all in relation to social media posts. Are you familiar 
with that information, Mr. Price?
    Mr. Price. I am, yes.
    Ms. Hageman. OK. In July, the House of Commons' Science, 
Innovation, and Technology Committee released a report 
indicating that the OSA was ``merely a first step,'' is the way 
that they have described this. In other words, they are 
planning to do even more to address what they describe as 
online harm.
    Have you heard that as well?
    Mr. Price. I have, yes.
    Ms. Hageman. Well, that there's something that just 
happened this week, and a few of the Members have referenced 
it, but it involved the Irish comedian and writer Graham 
Linehan, who was arrested in Britain apparently for social 
media posts about transgender issues. Did you hear of this 
circumstance?
    Mr. Price. Yes, I did. I know Graham personally.
    Ms. Hageman. OK. According to his Substack article, the 
trouble actually began when he was in America. He was at the 
airport in Arizona seeking to fly back to Europe, was told that 
he did not have a seat, was put on a later flight, and when he 
arrived at Heathrow, he was met by five armed police officers.
    Are police officers in England typically armed?
    Mr. Price. They're not, no.
    Ms. Hageman. Did you find it strange that he would be met 
by five armed police officers?
    Mr. Price. At airports, counterterrorism police are usually 
armed and--or, there is a special wing of the Metropolitan 
Police that has an armed support unit.
    Ms. Hageman. Is he considered a terrorist?
    Mr. Price. We're not--I'm not clear what provision he was 
arrested under legislation, but there is a power in the 
Terrorism Act to arrest people at airports and seize their 
devices.
    Ms. Hageman. Sure. Was he identified as a terrorist because 
of his online posts?
    Mr. Price. It's not clear yet if he was arrested under that 
provision, but it has very wide-ranging powers and it is used 
on occasion to detain people at ports.
    Ms. Hageman. OK. I understand that, and that probably is 
more of a frightening answer than I expected, which is that 
they've used the power that is typically reserved for 
terrorists or people who are a grave risk to the country to 
arrest Mr. Linehan at the airport because of his Twitter posts.
    Is that right?
    Mr. Price. It's not clear if they used it yet, but that is 
a power that they frequently--
    Ms. Hageman. OK.
    Mr. Price. --that is used to seize people's devices at 
airports.
    Ms. Hageman. Can you describe more of what happened with 
this incident involving Mr. Linehan? Do you have familiarity 
with the facts?
    Mr. Price. I've read his statement, yes.
    Ms. Hageman. OK. Could you please explain what happened?
    Mr. Price. It appears that he was detained on arrival in 
Heathrow and then arrested, searched, subjected to a long 
series of questions, most of which revolved around his beliefs 
on gender ideology and transgender issues.
    Some of the questions from the police, according to Mr. 
Linehan, were extremely ideological in nature, and they talked 
about people who are ``assigned'' a gender at birth, which, as 
he pointed out himself, is activist language that the police 
should not be using.
    Ms. Hageman. He also claims that his bail conditions was--
one of the conditions was that he could no longer use X. Is 
this a tactic you have seen or heard of being used before?
    Mr. Price. Yes. We've seen extraordinary bail conditions 
even placed on clients of our own. We had a client, Pastor Dia 
Moodley, who was given a bail condition that he was not allowed 
to preach about the differences between Christianity and Islam 
on the basis of that he would be bailed. We have seen bizarre 
and wide-ranging bail conditions set on people before under 
speech offenses.
    Mr. Knott. Time has expired.
    Ms. Hageman. OK. Thank you.
    Mr. Knott. The Chair now recognizes the gentlelady from 
North Carolina.
    Ms. Ross. Thank you very much. Thank you to all the 
witnesses for your testimony and for your patience. It's been a 
long hearing.
    It's very timely that we're discussing threats to freedom 
of speech and innovation in this Committee. I do wish we were 
talking about what's going on in this country right now, but I 
don't always get what I wish for.
    The freedom of speech in this country is under threat. 
There is no question about it. We haven't talked about this 
much so I'm going to focus on it--the essential American ideal 
of innovation is also under threat. It's enshrined in our 
Constitution, and it's being ignored.
    The gravest threats to speech and innovation are coming not 
from our democratic European allies, but from the authoritarian 
and unconstitutional actions of the Trump Administration.
    The Trump Administration has embarked on a coordinated 
crackdown of speech on universities across the country. I 
represent more than five universities in the Research Triangle 
area. I've seen it.
    The administration illegally froze billions of dollars in 
Federal research grants, affecting not just people's health and 
safety, which is what they were for in the first place, but the 
economies of places like North Carolina.
    They forced the resignation of university presidents they 
don't like. They threatened to strip universities of patents 
for discoveries made in their labs--unprecedented.
    This administration has also refused to restore these 
important grants, which fund research for everything from 
breast cancer to infant mortality, unless the schools allow the 
government to exert control over faculty hiring, academic 
programs, and student admissions.
    Professor Kaye, how have the Trump Administration's attacks 
on our Nation's preeminent research universities harmed the 
ability to innovate?
    Mr. Kaye. I think that's an excellent question. We've seen 
it across the board, these attacks on universities.
    If we think about universities--and there is a connection 
here to freedom of speech. If we think about universities as 
the principal engine for the generation of knowledge and the 
generation of ideas, basically innovation in our country, the 
administration is going after them in all the ways that you 
described.
    It goes after them not only by withholding grants that have 
already been awarded; it's also going after them in the context 
of seeking to shape what the research is, what's actually being 
taught in the classroom. Those are very significant 
interferences with the potential for innovation in our country.
    Ms. Ross. Well, thank you for that.
    Now, to get to the tech issues, because that's kind of 
underlying what's going on, this hearing is supposed to be 
about Europe's threat to Big Tech companies, but I'd like you 
to speak about the threat of Big Tech companies and the AI 
models that they're creating on intellectual property rights, 
many of which are protected more strongly in Europe than they 
are here.
    How have AI models that scrape everything that they can, 
whether copyrighted or not, impacted innovation and even our 
newspapers, which are having to sue for the copyright for the 
content that they create?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, this is, as you know, a pretty complicated 
area. I would highlight, just to bring it to European 
regulation for a moment: Whereas the United States has not 
really gone very far down the path of legislating in this area 
and finding ways to boost AI's potential for democratic and 
freedom-of-expression purposes, Europe has actually adopted an 
AI Act, which, again, we might not agree with all its 
particulars, but it's aiming to harness the power of AI for 
democratic purposes and to ensure that AI doesn't have this 
negative impact on fundamental rights.
    That's an approach that we can learn from, actually, and 
that we haven't so far.
    Ms. Ross. I want to just--because I know I only have a 
second left--I really want to give a lot of credit to 
Congressman Issa, because he has been having excellent hearings 
on this very issue. Unfortunately, the larger Judiciary 
Committee has taken no action.
    I would encourage the larger Judiciary Committee to follow 
Congressman Issa's lead about protecting our creators.
    Thank you, and I yield back.
    Mr. Knott. Thank you, Representative Ross. The Chair now 
recognizes the gentleman from South Carolina.
    Mr. Fry. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    We're here to talk about ongoing concerns with European 
censorship, British censorship, and its effect on American 
speech or broader free-speech principles that hurt certainly 
citizens but American companies both domestically and abroad.
    What I'm hearing today, at least from the witnesses, is 
rather alarming--this Orwellian-in-nature approach that Europe 
has taken, the hostility to free speech, to satire, and to 
maybe speech that you disagree with. I want to talk about that 
as it pertains to the U.K., the EU, and certainly the U.S.
    Mr. Price, Prime Minister Starmer said that the U.K. does 
not have a free-speech problem. Do you agree with that 
statement?
    Mr. Price. No, I do not.
    Mr. Fry. In what ways do you disagree with the Prime 
Minister?
    Mr. Price. We have seen numerous prosecutions in the United 
Kingdom for totally nonviolent speech. We have clients my own 
organization is acting for who have been arrested for silently 
praying, for offering consensual conversations, and for 
preaching about the gospel. I can go on. There are numerous, 
numerous examples.
    Mr. Fry. The 12,183 prosecutions is at least what I've 
read. Does that sound about accurate to you?
    Mr. Price. That sounds accurate.
    Mr. Fry. Which is a 50-percent increase from prepandemic 
levels. What does that tell you about maybe the focus of the 
British Government as it pertains to speech right now?
    Mr. Price. Sadly, it shows that the United Kingdom, just 
like the rest of Europe, has entered a spiral of censorship, 
and it's getting worse. It's gotten to the point where even our 
oldest and closest ally, the United States, has had to 
intervene and point that out. As I've said on numerous 
occasions, I'm extremely grateful to all of you for doing that.
    The problem, frankly, is being now compounded and set in 
stone by things like the DSA from the European Union and the 
Online Safety Act in the United Kingdom.
    Mr. Fry. Let's talk about the Online Safety Act for a 
second. Maybe it's intended to protect children, and I think 
everyone lauds that. Mr. Farage talked about that, that nobody, 
Right or Left, wants their child exposed to bad content online.
    It's been talked about, and you've seen this in your 
practice, used as a weapon to target speech that maybe the 
government finds uncomfortable or disagrees with. Is that 
correct?
    Mr. Price. Yes, that's correct. We've seen, for example, 
Section 62, which is designed to protect children, being used 
to censor videos of protests near asylum centers.
    Once you reach a point where content is restricted on the 
basis that it is political, we're moving well out of any kind 
of zone of protecting children into essentially censorship.
    Mr. Fry. Right. At least in the case of the comedian, the 
Irish comedian that was recently arrested I viewed--I was not 
aware of his content before and then looked at it, and it 
seemed to be satirical in nature or maybe hyperbolic and not 
necessarily to be treated literally. Is that your 
interpretation of that too?
    Mr. Price. Yes. In fact, I told Graham Linehan, when I was 
growing up, I wasn't allowed to watch his comedy on TV. 
``Father Ted'' was the show that he's probably most famous for.
    What I would say is, he's an excellent satirist, and he's 
in the long tradition of Irish satire, starting with Jonathan 
Swift, really, and all the way up to today.
    Mr. Fry. Isn't that part of British society, though, is 
satire is embedded in the culture? Like, you've embraced this 
for hundreds of years, right?
    Mr. Price. Yes. I would just add, Irish and British.
    Mr. Fry. Irish and British. Excuse me.
    Mr. Price. Yes. Very much so, yes. It's a concept--really, 
we haven't seen political extremism in the British Isles in the 
way that we did in Europe because we have a healthy way of kind 
of laughing at and poking fun at our leadership. Whether it's 
cartoons about the king in the 1800s all the way up to ``Father 
Ted'' and Graham Linehan's work today, that's a great 
tradition.
    Mr. Fry. Isn't there growing frustration with the Irish 
people, the British people, maybe broader European cultures, 
that the government is more focused on speech than it is, say, 
the migrant crimes that are happening right under their noses?
    That seems to be, from my view across the pond, that 
particularly the British people, they're fed up with the 
nonenforcement of immigration laws at the expense or maybe 
because in large part they're focused on what people are saying 
online. Do you share that?
    Mr. Price. I completely agree with that. This is a 
discussion I had with Representative Raskin in London. This is 
about shutting down growing discontent in Europe with the 
decisions that our political elites have made. We've reached a 
crisis point where it's no longer possible to conceal the level 
of public anger. These censorship maneuvers are an act of 
desperation, and they won't work.
    Mr. Fry. Thank you for that.
    Radically shifting to Mr. Reed for a second, in a different 
approach: In the app industry, does the DMA incentivize Chinese 
copycat companies to flood the market? If so, how does that 
impact American companies in European markets? What are the 
associated data privacy implications of that?
    Mr. Knott. You may finish.
    Mr. Reed. Being aware of the time. Yes. The problem is 
Article 6, Section 4--
    Mr. Fry. You have unlimited time. Pay no attention to the 
Chair.
    Mr. Reed. OK. I always pay attention to the Chair and the 
Ranking Member.
    The easy idea is, Article 6, Section 4, Article 6, Section 
7, and even 10, part of the problem is they basically have 
must-carry provisions. What that does is open the door.
    Part of what small businesses have benefited the most from 
the existence of these platforms--again, as I said, this isn't 
a love affair. It's a business relationship. They opened the 
door to customers, and the customers trust what they're buying 
on the platform.
    The Article 6, Section 4, and Section 7, really say they 
must put on anyone's product. Of course, the most classic 
example of that: The first mover under the new DMA was Pornhub, 
which--Apple had decided they didn't want porn apps on their 
app store. The first one out of the gate to say--incorrectly, 
they claimed it was an Apple-approved app, which once again 
leads to confusion and breaks down trust. That was, out of the 
gate, the first app.
    From my Members' perspective, their concern is, hey, I want 
to be sold at the store that people feel comfortable buying at. 
The more you degrade the quality of experience and the more you 
degrade or allow it to be broader, we run into a problem.
    Mr. Knott. The gentleman's time has expired.
    Mr. Reed. Thank you. I'm sorry for the time.
    Mr. Raskin. Mr. Chair, I have a parliamentary inquiry.
    Mr. Knott. Yes, sir. Go ahead.
    Mr. Raskin. Apparently, the whereabouts of our missing 
witness have been ascertained. He is appearing on GB News, 
which I guess is the network he works for, outside of the 
Rayburn Building.
    I just wonder if it would be consistent with the rules and 
the practice of our Committee for us to send someone to invite 
him to come back, because I think we have five or six Members 
who haven't questioned yet.
    Would that be alright, if we sent someone to go alert him 
that there are still Members waiting to do their questioning, 
just out of courtesy and respect for our colleagues?
    Mr. Knott. Well, the Chair will make note that the witness 
has appeared voluntarily and he has left voluntarily. In terms 
of going and asking him to come back, no objection there.
    Mr. Raskin. OK. If we could do it, if we could find him.
    I'd like to submit for the record this clip from GB News: 
``British Free Speech Under Threat? Nigel Farage Says U.K. is 
an Authoritarian State Like North Korea.''
    Mr. Knott. Without objection.
    Mr. Raskin. Thank you.
    Mr. Knott. Does the gentleman yield?
    Mr. Raskin. Yes, sir.
    Mr. Knott. The Chair recognizes the Representative from 
Vermont.
    Ms. Balint. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    I spent my August traveling around my State listening to 
Vermonters tell me what was on their minds, and there was one 
constant thread, and that was fear and concern for young 
people--for their safety and their future.
    Parents kept asking me, will my kids ever be able to afford 
a house in this economy? Is it going to be safe for my kid to 
go to school? Are my kids safe online? Over and over again.
    I want to tell you about one conversation I had with a high 
school student in Vermont, who said to me, ``we all know that 
social media on our phones is hurting us, and in some 
instances, it's literally killing us.'' What he wanted to say 
is, what are you doing about it? What are you doing about it?
    I have to ask myself the same question, because I'm a 
parent, I'm a former teacher, I'm now a Member of Congress, and 
what are we actually doing to solve the problem, to stand up 
for our kids?
    It's clear we need real attention on this. We need to focus 
our attention. We do need to regulate corporations behind these 
problems. We need real public oversight, yes, over the gun 
makers, yes, over financial speculators, but also Big Tech.
    Because polls show, across the country, Americans 
overwhelmingly want us to take action on the harms that are 
hurting their kids.
    Yet, here we are, first hearing back. We're not talking 
about the AI platforms that are leading kids to self-harm. 
We're not talking about the algorithms profiting off teens' 
eating disorders. We're not working together to hold Big Tech 
accountable. No. We're here talking about how other countries 
are being too mean to Big Tech. It's gross.
    Professor Kaye, thanks for being here. Can you briefly 
describe how the EU's Digital Services Act regulates social 
media content for children?
    Mr. Kaye. The DSA is a very big piece of legislation, a big 
regulation, but it gets to exactly the point that you're 
making, which is, the DSA is the result of a years-long process 
of, democratically, Europe trying to figure out what's the 
response to the massive power of Big Tech over their 
information environments.
    To give one example, they provide a mechanism that actually 
requires those companies that are considered the very largest 
platforms and search engines to do an assessment of the risk 
that they cause in the context of illegal content, which could 
include child sexual abuse material.
    That is really only doing that basic risk assessment that 
we should imagine all companies would do.
    Ms. Balint. Exactly.
    Mr. Kaye. Then, based on that, they're supposed to--they're 
actually obligated to take mitigating measures against them.
    Ms. Balint. Yes.
    Mr. Kaye. That's one example.
    Ms. Balint. Yes. This is bare-minimum stuff here, right? 
Bare minimum.
    Mr. Kaye. Yes.
    Ms. Balint. Risk assessment: What are we subjecting our 
children to?
    Mr. Kaye. Correct.
    Ms. Balint. In your assessment, does the EU prioritize 
protecting kids and teens from content related to suicide and 
self-harm?
    Mr. Kaye. The DSA is not content-specific, right? It 
doesn't require any company, for example, to take down any 
particular kind of content. In the risk assessment provision, 
it's pretty clear, and if you read the negotiating history 
around the DSA as well, it's pretty clear that this is one of 
the key issues that concerns Europeans and, thus, concerned the 
regulation as it was adopted.
    Ms. Balint. Thank you. I really appreciate you being here 
to balance this out. Look, we've got to follow the money here, 
OK? I want to draw your attention here to the visual here, OK?
    Trump Inauguration Fund: Amazon, a million; Meta, a 
million; Google, a million; Microsoft, a million; Apple, a 
million; OpenAI, a million. The list goes on.
    This hearing is not about making the internet a safer place 
for kids. It's about harassing Europeans who are trying to do 
something--something. No, it's imperfect, but they're trying 
something, and we sit here twiddling our thumbs.
    There has never been a more important time than now to 
create some basic rules for Big Tech. Our kids are more 
important than these billionaires and their shareholders, 
period. If we truly want to protect our kids, we have to push 
back on unrestrained corporate power and try to retain some 
moral clarity in this moment.
    Chair Jordan. [Presiding.] The gentlelady--
    Ms. Balint. I was told I would have more time because there 
was a Member that went over by a minute.
    Chair Jordan. Sure. Go right ahead.
    Ms. Balint. We should be looking at any country around the 
globe who is actually trying to do something. No, should we 
copy exactly what they're doing? No. We shouldn't stick our 
heads in the sand and say, ``Oh, there's nothing we can do 
here.''
    We cannot maintain the status quo and then go back to our 
constituents and look these parents in the eye and say that 
we're actually doing our jobs. The solutions are right in front 
of us if we would actually do the work here in this Committee.
    I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentlelady yields back.
    I would just remind the gentlelady that Mr. Zuckerberg from 
Meta sent this Committee a letter a year ago, August of last 
year, saying that the Biden Administration pressured them to 
censor, they did it, they're sorry, and they're not going to do 
it again, and they've changed policy. I said that in my opening 
statement. We do think this Committee has had a huge impact on 
protecting free speech.
    The gentlelady from Florida is recognized for five minutes.
    Ms. Lee. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Today, we are examining a growing threat--the way that 
Europe and the U.K. are using so-called digital safety and 
competition laws to undermine American values and American 
innovation.
    The EU Digital Services Act and the U.K.'s Online Safety 
Act go far beyond legitimate regulation. They empower foreign 
bureaucrats to label political dissent, even ordinary phrases 
like ``take back our country,'' as hate speech, and they 
pressure U.S. platforms to apply those censorship rules 
globally.
    At the same time, the EU's Digital Markets Act and the 
U.K.'s DMCC deliberately single out American technology 
companies for punitive treatment, forcing them to share 
proprietary data and subsidize less innovative rivals. These 
laws are protectionist by design, and they put American jobs, 
innovation, and free speech at risk.
    Congress has a duty to push back. We must ensure that 
foreign governments cannot dictate what Americans are allowed 
to say online nor use regulatory schemes and backdoor taxes on 
our most successful industries.
    I look forward to hearing from you all today and appreciate 
your testimony.
    Mr. Price, I am a former American judge, and, as such, I 
know that laws must have clear, defined terms to be applied 
impartially and fairly and consistently.
    I'd like to return to the discussion of the OSA and 
specifically the requirement under which speech to be censored 
as a false communication, it must cause, quote, ``nontrivial 
psychological or physical harm.''
    Would you share with us your perspective on the use of 
phrases such as ``nontrivial psychological harm'' and your view 
of whether it is possible for these terms to be applied 
uniformly, fairly, and consistently?
    Mr. Price. I'm afraid I really can't. You've hit the nail 
on the head, really, in terms of your question. These terms are 
extremely vague. It's a longstanding principle of the common 
law that vagueness in the criminal law is repugnant.
    Ms. Lee. Sir, is it your view that this is actually an 
appropriate or even enforceable regulatory scheme?
    Mr. Price. It's not appropriate, but they certainly intend 
to enforce it.
    Ms. Lee. OK. Thank you. Mr. Reed, I'd like to turn back to 
the DMA's application to our companies and the concept of 
gatekeepers, which we touched on earlier today.
    Would you please describe how that operates and how these 
regulations are creating an unfair competitive advantage for 
European and Chinese firms at the expense of American 
companies?
    Mr. Reed. Well, the primary problem with the way that the 
EU has set up the gatekeeper requirements is, it's driving the 
largest companies to essentially pull back from the tools they 
build for my members, from the frameworks that they build for 
the small businesses--ironically, oftentimes, these small guys 
are the ones who are going to compete with them--because it 
allows them to say, well, to comply with the DMA, we need to 
remove various functions.
    This isn't a hypothetical. What we've seen so far in our 
discussions is, they want to remove link-throughs, they want to 
remove other elements that they see as essentially keeping 
power in a few of the big companies.
    The irony is, of course, the small guy, not the medium-size 
guy, not the billionaire, but the truly small guys actually 
need that foothold to step up. What it creates is an 
environment where, sure, there will be some billionaire 
companies that will do well out of the DMA, but the 
thousandaires, those of us who are trying to get to that next 
level, are the ones who get crushed between the two
giants.
    Ms. Lee. Thank you. I yield the balance of my time to the 
Chair.
    Chair Jordan. I thank you. Mr. Price, I just want to make 
sure I understand exactly what's happening.
    A pastor gets arrested for what he said, but the guys who 
attacked him don't.
    Lucy Connolly said things that she shouldn't have, 
probably--or, not ``probably''--definitely. I mean, what did 
Mr. Farage say, ``intemperate statements''? She took them down. 
She got more prison time than young violent offenders got.
    Ms. Rose Doherty, I believe, was praying silently outside, 
and she got charged. Is that all accurate?
    Mr. Price. The only point I would add is, Rose Doherty, a 
74-year-old grandmother, was arrested for holding a sign that 
said, ``Here to talk, only if you want.''
    Chair Jordan. Oh. She was praying silent---not saying 
anything, just a sign, right?
    Mr. Price. Just a sign, sir. Yes, sir.
    Chair Jordan. Oh, wow. Wow. If an American comments on this 
in a way that the DSA defines as disinformation, 
misinformation, hate speech, they can have their speech taken 
down as well. Is that accurate?
    Mr. Price. That is entirely accurate within the terms of 
the DSA.
    Chair Jordan. That's the State of play.
    Mr. Reed, I would just point out, when Ms. Virkkunen, the 
guy--the lady who took Mr. Breton's place, when she was here 
talking about how the Digital Markets Act could impact 
companies, she said, ``You know, we don't have anyone in Europe 
complaining about the law.'' My response was, ``That's because 
you don't have any companies.''
    The way you define it, according to Mr. Price--and you 
understand--it only includes American companies and one Chinese 
company. Is that right?
    Mr. Reed. Well, the irony is, there are a lot of smaller 
European companies that are complaining about the DMA. Not the 
idea that they need a competitive landscape; it's that it 
focuses on entirely the wrong thing.
    Chair Jordan. Yep.
    Mr. Reed. You hit it on the head. A lot of our Members come 
here to get money to go back there to build products.
    Chair Jordan. Yep. I'm sorry. They called votes. I do want 
to move quickly, and I shouldn't have went over. Mr. Garcia is 
recognized.
    Mr. Garcia. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    We are here today for two reasons: (1) Republicans are in 
the pocket of Big Tech; and (2) they want to distract us on the 
war on free speech and expression in the U.S.
    We all remember Trump's inauguration. The tech oligarchs 
were all there--Musk, Zuckerberg, Bezos, Cook, and Pichai--and 
they looked like they won the Presidency. Because they did.
    They got what they paid for. Since taking office, Trump put 
out an AI action plan that could've been written by Big Tech, 
dropped enforcement provisions against tech companies, and 
tried to unlawfully fire two FTC commissioners who fought to 
hold these companies accountable. By the way, one successfully 
got back to work today, first day back. That's Rebecca 
Slaughter.
    Trump and his loyalists in Congress are also serving their 
corporate overlords by attacking the countries that actually 
try to rein in Big Tech. That's not innovation; that's 
corruption and oligarchy.
    The American people do not want corruption and oligarchy. 
They want leaders who have the backbone to stand up to Big 
Tech, to stop massive surveillance and protect data privacy and 
uphold freedom of speech.
    The people least qualified to talk about freedom of 
expression are the ones that currently are cracking down on the 
First Amendment. As my colleagues have described, Trump and his 
fellow Republicans have banned words that the Federal 
Government can use. They have extorted media companies to 
punish news coverage they don't like. They've weaponized the 
immigration system against people who have other views. They've 
suppressed economic data and other information that contradicts 
the propaganda machine, and targeted medical research, even, 
and museum exhibits--all because they're afraid of words, 
history, and the truth.
    At the same time, Republicans are leading a historic 
crackdown on expression and they're holding propaganda hearings 
like this and telling us to reject the evidence of our eyes and 
ears.
    Mr. Kaye, thank you for being here today.
    As I mentioned, this administration is using the 
immigration system to suppress speech, as we've seen--Mahmoud 
Khalil, Mohsen Mahdawi, Mario Guevara, and many others being 
targeted and detained because of their speech and, in Guevara's 
case, his reporting. Could you please comment on the ongoing 
weaponization of immigration to trample freedom of expression?
    Mr. Kaye. Yes. Each of those examples is accurate. As we've 
heard so many different examples of crackdowns or alleged 
crackdowns on different kinds of speech in the U.K. or in 
Europe or in the United States, we just have to be honest that 
there are crackdowns happening in the United States.
    It's entirely accurate to say these kinds of content-based 
restrictions and punishments in the U.S. are very serious 
interferences with freedom of expression. It would just be 
important to acknowledge that as we're talking about other 
kinds of restrictions as well.
    Mr. Garcia. Thank you for that. It's really important that 
we not allow arsonists to pretend that they're firefighters, 
and we must not let Republican lies prevail.
    I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back.
    We will do one more. Then, unfortunately, we have to recess 
for votes. I know guys have been sitting there for three hours. 
You need a well-deserved restroom break. We'll see if we've got 
some refreshments for you back there, hopefully.
    Mr. Harris is recognized, and then we'll take a quick 
recess.
    Mr. Harris. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you for this 
important, important issue.
    To all of you that have shared on this panel today, greatly 
appreciate your patience and your thoughtful answers.
    I've served as a pastor for 36 years, and so, obviously, I 
have a heightened sensitivity to the whole issue of when 
governments and institutions begin to talk about hate speech 
and the censorship of hate speech.
    I guess one of the questions that I'm concerned about 
today--and I'll ask you, Mr. Price, because of your experience 
in this area, particularly with ADF. Would you consider posting 
a Bible verse hate speech?
    Mr. Price. No.
    Mr. Harris. Is saying there are only two genders hate 
speech?
    Mr. Price. I certainly wouldn't consider that hate speech.
    Mr. Harris. Yet, the U.K.'s Online Safety Act, among other 
things, is requiring companies to take actions against content 
which, quote, ``incites hatred against people.''
    I guess my question is, again, Mr. Price, who is in charge 
of determining what constitutes content which incites hatred 
against people?
    Mr. Price. The regulator of the Online Safety Act is Ofcom, 
which is the statutory body.
    The legislation itself includes what they call ``priority 
content.'' That's content that would be age-restricted. It 
encompasses things that are illegal outside--or in real life, 
not online.
    The problem with that is that our Pastor Dia Moodley that I 
mentioned earlier, he was threatened--he was arrested under the 
Public Order Act, which talks about stirring up religious 
hatred, for comparing Islam and Christianity.
    On the basis that the Online Safety Act restricts something 
that's deemed to be a crime outside, that kind of content would 
be restricted. That's extraordinary overreach.
    Mr. Harris. Is hate speech, quote, ``objective''?
    Mr. Price. This is where I might just pick up on something 
Professor Kaye said earlier in relation to hate speech. The 
problem with it is, it's a tautology, saying that incitement to 
hatred is speech that creates hatred.
    There have been attempts by the United Nations, like the 
Rabat Plan of Action, to try and, on the prosecution side, set 
out a more clear framework for it. As far as European courts 
are concerned, that their jurisprudence in this area is 
essentially incoherent.
    Mr. Harris. Right. Well, obviously, I oppose any hateful 
rhetoric that's expressed online, but, at the end of the day, 
it's not the job of governments to police bad speech, 
especially when they'll never be able to agree on what actually 
constitutes bad speech. At the end of the day, the best remedy 
for bad speech is good speech, not censorship, in my opinion.
    I'll also ask: There is currently a clash between social 
media platforms that value free speech and the laws of the 
U.K., causing some companies to alter their terms of service.
    Mr. Price, are American social media companies expected to 
comply with U.K.'s Online Safety Act?
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir, they are.
    Mr. Harris. How does this impact the way in which companies 
set their terms of service?
    Mr. Price. We've seen this again and again when it comes to 
regulations from European regulators, either from Brussels or 
London, where companies, of course, commercial enterprises, 
setting and designing a system that complies with EU law often 
means setting something for their entire operations globally.
    We saw that again and again with GDPR. Every time you have 
to click ``I don't want cookies'' or something--and Americans 
are exposed to this--that's as a result of--it's a complicated 
enough process, but--of European regulation reaching into your 
online activity.
    Mr. Harris. Well, again, this is a critically important 
issue.
    You've done some incredible work, I know, with Alliance 
Defending Freedom, and I know, Mr. Price, you have defended 
witnesses criminally charged for praying near abortion clinics. 
One of those examples was Father Sean Gough, a Catholic priest 
who was charged for praying and holding a sign that read, 
``Praying for free speech.''
    The U.K. authorities allege that silent prayer near 
abortion clinics constitutes an attempt to coerce women who are 
considering abortions.
    I just ask, is silent prayer coercive?
    Mr. Price. No, sir.
    Mr. Harris. Should silent prayer and holding signs result 
in legal consequences?
    Mr. Price. Absolutely not.
    Mr. Harris. So, when prolife activists are prosecuted for 
engaging in peaceful prayer and protest, what kind of message 
does that send to other prolife activists in the U.K.?
    Mr. Price. It shows an extreme degree of intolerance; it 
shows police overreach.
    Ultimately, we have to go back systemically--the problem is 
these laws that are being created. They are incredibly vague, 
overbroad, whether it's by European regulators or U.K. 
regulators. They're having a real impact on people's lives and 
their human right to free speech.
    Mr. Harris. Well, as this Committee has discussed 
previously, the FACE Act here in the United States has been 
used to go after prolifers, and I just pray we don't reach the 
point that such activists are arrested for silent prayer, as 
we've seen there.
    With that, Mr. Chair, I yield back.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The Committee will 
stand in recess for 15 minutes, more or less. Restrooms and 
refreshments in the back for you guys.
    Thank you so much.
    [Recess.]
    Chair Jordan. The Committee will come to order. We have a 
few more--again, I want to thank our witnesses. You've been 
very patient, very good. We appreciate you being here.
    We're going to start with the gentleman from Wisconsin. 
Then, we'll go to the gentleman from North Carolina, unless a 
Member of the Minority party shows up and then we'll go with 
them. We'll finish up from there.
    The gentleman from Wisconsin is recognized for five 
minutes.
    Mr. Grothman. It's my opinion--first, I had a few comments 
I wanted to have for Mr.--Farange (sic), we call it?--before he 
left.
    Chair Jordan. Farage.
    Mr. Grothman. I have always known--there are certain things 
you think about the English. I know we can't stereotype today, 
but we're going to. When you think of the English, you think of 
irreverence. You think of accepting of eccentricities, right? 
You think of their dry sense of humor.
    There is no--if we had to crack down on free speech in any 
country in the world, the country we'd lose the most in is if 
we cracked down on free speech in England. Because they are 
great, aren't they? There was just a general comment.
    Now, Mr. Price, there are a variety of things we're trying 
to get at in this hearing, and some of it is financial and how 
regulations can hurt companies. The most important thing is to 
wake up the world in what's going on in Britain, OK, and other 
countries in Europe. I don't think the average American is 
aware of that.
    It's important they be aware of it, because, in general, 
stupid-idiot ideas begin in Europe, and then they go to 
California and New York, and then they seep their way across 
the United States.
    This idea that we can crack down on free speech--I would 
like you, Mr. Price, just to go through a few examples, 
including the examples of that poor gal who wound up in prison. 
Don't be afraid to not be able to say what she said, ``because 
we're still in America, it's still a free country.''
    What do you say to wind up having to go to prison in 
Britain today? Exactly what do you have to say? While you're 
still in the U.S.
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir. I am going back to the U.K., though, 
and after what happened to my fellow Irishman, Graham Linehan, 
I might just be careful.
    One thing I would say is that the overbroad laws that we've 
been discussing, and the implementation or the enforcement of 
the law has reached a point where we now have perfectly 
legitimate speech being caught up in criminal prosecutions.
    For a Christian pastor like Dia Moodley in the city of 
Bristol, it's a perfectly natural thing to answer a question 
from a member of the public about the differences between 
Christianity and Islam. The fact that he was ultimately 
arrested under the Public Order Act there for stirring up 
religious hatred, a charge they later dropped, and not the 
people who are assaulting him gives us an idea of how bad 
things have gotten in the U.K.
    We were delighted, of course, that Vice President Vance, in 
his Munich Security Conference speech, drew attention to this 
other class of cases involving prosecutions for praying 
silently or for holding a sign offering consensual 
conversations in vicinity of abortion clinics, which is an 
extraordinary assault on freedom of speech and, I would say, 
freedom of religion as well.
    Mr. Grothman. OK. When I was looking this up, I didn't know 
what she said. Apparently, she was critical of a mass murderer 
whose ancestors came from Rwanda. It's now against the law to 
point that out in Great Britain, apparently?
    Mr. Price. Yes. That's the case of Lucy Connolly. Lucy 
Connolly tweeted a tweet where some of us--or I think most 
people would probably disagree with what she said. She 
disagreed with it herself. She took it down 3\1/2\ hours later. 
It was, as Mr. Farage said, ``in a moment of great tension and 
great personal stress.'' For that, she received a 31-32-month 
sentence. She has been released since, but she was prevented 
from attending this hearing, which I think is a real shame.
    Mr. Grothman. Last week, in the United States, we had a 
horrible murder, and I think it was a Catholic school in 
Minnesota. The murderer happened to be a transgender. Would 
that be illegal to point out in England?
    Mr. Price. If you were--you could very readily see that it 
could be regarded--strong criticism--
    Mr. Grothman. It was a bitter, angry person who--
    Mr. Price. Yes.
    Mr. Grothman. Could we point out maybe that had something 
to do with transgender? Can people have that opinion in 
Britain?
    Mr. Price. If I were advising people--and this is the 
chilling effect in action--I would say, think very carefully 
before posting criticism of what happened, that tragedy in the 
school in England, because you could be accused very easily of 
stirring up hatred against a group of people.
    Mr. Grothman. ``Stirring up hatred.'' I mean, that's just 
preposterous. What is hatred? I don't even know what hatred is.
    Mr. Price. This is an ongoing discussion among lawyers in 
relation to--
    Mr. Grothman. Is there any--just so you know, in your 
understanding and your understanding, Mr. Reed, is there any--
doesn't free speech mean I can say things that maybe imply I 
hate somebody? Can I hate somebody? Is that against the law 
now?
    Mr. Reed. Really, that's a question that Mr. Price is 
probably better to handle.
    Mr. Grothman. Controversial. Maybe I can't. Well, thank 
God, I'm the type of person who's never hated anybody in my 
life. If I was a different sort of person, would it be against 
the law to say I hate somebody?
    Mr. Price. The difficulty with it is that we've seen again 
and again legitimate Christian beliefs being described as 
hatred when it comes to the definition of marriage, when it 
comes to sexual relations.
    Mr. Grothman. Would it be the easiest thing just to enforce 
the First Amendment and say we can say whatever we want to say? 
Go back to old English?
    Mr. Price. What I would say is, you're well-blessed in this 
country to have the extraordinary protections of the First 
Amendment, and I really do wish we had something similar in 
Europe.
    Mr. Grothman. Well, next time you get back to Europe, 
straighten them out, kick them in the butt, OK? Thanks.
    Mr. Price. Yes, sir.
    Chair Jordan. The gentleman yields back. The gentlelady 
from Texas, who joined us for part of our visit to the 
European--to Europe--we appreciate that--recognized for five 
minutes.
    Ms. Crockett. Yes. I hate that I didn't get to reminisce 
with our good friend, Mr. Farage.
    Nevertheless, it's interesting that we're sitting here and 
we're talking about the so-called threats to the First 
Amendment when the biggest threat to free speech right now is 
the old guy that is sitting over in the Oval.
    Now, Mr. Farage and I met over a month ago. He has made it 
a brand of being this free-speech warrior. One of the things 
that I wanted to recap was the fact that he literally tried to 
shut down my Ranking Member as he was engaging in his own free 
speech. It seems like it's more so ``free speech for me, but 
not for thee'' a lot of times with certain people. It's sad 
that he had to run and have lunch with Trump or to go raise 
some money for his four-member party.
    Mr. Price, you get to be the lucky one to help me figure 
out what exactly free-speech advocates believe. It's good to 
see you again. You tell me whether these government actions 
support free speech or suppress it. Let's call it ``free 
speech'' or ``Federal suppression.'' Fining or defending--or 
defunding news outlets or companies because they don't share a 
political--a particular political message.
    Mr. Price. I'm not entirely sure what context you're 
referring to. I think I'd need a little bit more information.
    Ms. Crockett. Long story short, if they decide that they 
are going to fine or defund any news outlet simply because it 
doesn't necessarily go far Left or far Right, do you think that 
this is a violation of free speech?
    Mr. Price. Well, I'm not entirely sure how it would connect 
with, let's say, the area of expertise that I have. I think you 
may be referring to the PBS controversy. It's probably not 
something that I would be able to really--
    Ms. Crockett. Not necessarily. Let me go to Professor Kaye. 
Professor Kaye, did you understand my question? Fining or 
defunding news outlets or companies because they don't share a 
particular political message.
    Mr. Kaye. Yes. Thank you for the question. At the very core 
of the First Amendment is a prohibition of viewpoint 
discrimination.
    Ms. Crockett. OK.
    Mr. Kaye. What you describe sounds like viewpoint 
discrimination.
    Ms. Crockett. It definitely sounds like Federal 
suppression.
    If you require news outlets and companies to have content 
moderators to ensure their coverage promotes a political 
ideology or leaning, would that be Federal suppression?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, that does sound like an interference with a 
company's content moderation decision.
    Ms. Crockett. Banning materials because of their content?
    Mr. Kaye. Materials?
    Ms. Crockett. Yes. So, like, books.
    Mr. Kaye. Oh. Of course. Well, we've seen this in the range 
of book bans at libraries across the country.
    Ms. Crockett. Absolutely. What about threatening private 
companies with lawsuits or fines unless they do the 
government's bidding?
    Mr. Kaye. It sounds like pressure that would be undue, yes.
    Ms. Crockett. OK. I agree with you.
    All these actions are exactly what Trump has done since 
he's taken office. Make no mistake, Trump is weaponizing his 
idea of free speech to force folks and companies to become his 
political puppets to promote his propaganda.
    Trump and Republicans defunded NPR because they argued it 
was biased.
    Trump has removed books discussing racial discrimination at 
U.S. military academies, including the amazing Maya Angelou's 
autobiography, ``I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.''
    He's tried to strip funding to schools across the country 
if they don't remove materials that include discussions of 
racial discrimination or that promote diversity.
    In order for the merger between Paramount and Skydance to 
happen, the FCC Chair and Republican-appointed commissioners 
required Skydance to establish a bias monitor and, in its FCC 
order, noted reports, quote, ``concerning negative media 
coverage of the Trump Administration.''
    This is to say nothing of Trump pushing television networks 
to get rid of comedians and talk-show hosts who criticize his 
administration, say, like Mr. Colbert.
    Let's call this what it is: It's Trump weaponizing the idea 
of free speech to force people, institutions, and companies to 
be his mouthpieces. This ain't free speech; it's propaganda.
    Meanwhile, my Republican colleagues are out here having a 
meltdown over the European bill--one that, by the way, 
inclusion provisions to fight child trafficking.
    It's frustrating because we talk about being fiscally 
responsible and we talk about free speech, and right now, as 
we're having these discussions, you know who's trying to shut 
down Members from voting in the way that they want to vote? 
It's the President, who literally said he would look at anyone 
who decided that they were going to vote to release the Epstein 
files as hostile.
    That sounds like a threat as it relates to all First 
Amendment protections, in addition to the fact that it's 
literally contravening our constitutional duty that we swore an 
oath to. Because we don't swear to an orange king. Instead, we 
have sworn an oath to the Constitution, and we were elected to 
represent the people that elected us.
    Thank you so much, and I'll yield.
    Chair Jordan. The gentlelady yields. The gentleman from 
North Carolina is recognized.
    Mr. Knott. Thank you, Mr. Chair. To the witnesses, thank 
you all for being here.
    This is a very important topic when we look at what's going 
on in Europe and, because of what's going on in Europe, what's 
happening, by extension, around the world. When we look at the 
encroachments on freedom of expression, freedom of speech, it 
is chilling. It's remarkable that the countries that gave birth 
to the Western civilization that we all enjoy are really 
becoming totalitarian.
    Even points of expression that are organic to the United 
States or statements made while in the United States can result 
in being arrested once you return to Europe. If this was noted 
15-20 years ago, people would not believe it.
    Listening to the witnesses here who are on the ground, who 
are dealing with these totalitarian measures in Europe, it's 
worth noting to anyone who listens that they are thanking the 
President of the United States. They are begging the President, 
they are begging the Vice President and the Secretary of State 
to continue doing what they're doing, fighting this repression 
that's going on in Europe.
    We've heard testimony that economic liberty is diminishing, 
freedom of opinion is diminishing, freedom of expression is 
gone, increased scrutiny of online comments--Twitter, 
Facebook--or X, excuse me--is gone, all under the mantra of 
safety.
    Mr. Price, I want to talk to you first. You said that these 
points of legislation are really aimed at, quote, ``protecting 
youth.'' How exactly are the proponents of these restrictive 
measures--how are they making the argument that they are 
protecting youth?
    Mr. Price. Yes, that's the argument they make, sir.
    Essentially, particularly if we look at the Online Safety 
Act, the premise is that safety requires various kinds of 
restrictions, such as age verification. What that does, in 
effect, is that it means that minors aren't allowed to access 
certain content.
    There's are two types of content. One is what they call 
primary priority content, which is the worst kind of thing that 
we would all agree is wrongful. Then, there's also priority--or 
primary content, which would include things that I think are 
otherwise lawful that people should be allowed to access, 
particularly in the United Kingdom, where the proposal now is 
to give--it's been passed or it's in the process--16-year-olds 
the vote, who would then be prevented from seeing certain 
content under the Online Safety Act.
    Mr. Knott. In terms of some of the examples you've 
mentioned that give me concern, it doesn't seem as though 
there's too much restriction for modern gender theory, 
transgenderism, aimed at children, or graphic or explicit 
material aimed at children, but there are restrictions on 
pointing out verses of scripture or biblical truths that people 
adhere to. You can't discuss that online.
    How does that factor into the protection of the child?
    Mr. Price. I think your point is well-made.
    It's worth noting and it often strikes me that smartphones 
with internet access have been available really--the iPhone was 
launched in 2008, and there were no immediate actions by 
governments or regulators to try and protect children from 
content. It's only after the election of Donald Trump and 
Brexit that there was suddenly an enormous effort at the 
European level to crack down on content in the name of safety. 
I suspect, as I say, that there's an underlying political 
justification.
    Mr. Knott. What's the goal? We've talked about the 
diminishing prosperity. The freedom is gone. There's diminished 
enjoyment of life. There's diminished humor. There's zero free-
flowing information. What's the goal besides complete political 
power?
    Mr. Price. I certainly think the goal, as you allude to, is 
narrative control. Information is the first and most important, 
as it were, quantity in a democracy. That's how we make our 
decisions, based on what we hear. If you can restrict the 
amount of information that people hear or you can channel it in 
one direction, then you influence democracy.
    As I say, there's increasing discontent in Europe about the 
direction of travel in so many areas, and I do believe the DSA, 
like the German Network Enforcement Act and other related 
legislation, is part of a serious effort to control the 
narrative.
    Mr. Knott. It's basically a tool of, quote, 
``progressivism'' to silence dissent and to move the agenda 
forward. Is that correct? That's what I'm gleaning from the 
conversation today.
    Mr. Price. Certainly, in a lot of our work it has gone that 
way. It seems that Christians are disproportionately targeted.
    There was a dissenting opinion by the Polish judge in a 
case called Dorota Rabczewska before the European Court of 
Human Rights in 2022, where he made the observation that, when 
it comes to speech, those who are critics of Islam seem to be 
prosecuted and do not have the protections of the right to 
freedom of expression, whereas Christians--people who are 
critical of Christianity are prosecuted and they suddenly are 
entitled to free speech in that context.
    In the U.K., we often call this two-tier policing, and I 
think there's a two-tier approach to human rights. Certainly, 
the Polish judge did, and I agree with him.
    Mr. Knott. Interesting. Mr. Kaye, just briefly, in regard 
to the points that you've made--I appreciate what you've said; 
I appreciate your perspectives--would you admit at this point 
that the Biden Administration was involved in suppressing 
information as it related to various components of the COVID 
response, the COVID treatment plans, the vaccine's efficacy, 
and so forth?
    Mr. Kaye. I mean, no. That is just not something I know--
    Mr. Knott. You wouldn't stipulate to that?
    Mr. Kaye. No.
    Mr. Knott. Even--I know you criticized Mr. Zuckerberg for 
saying that the government leaned heavily on social media 
companies to remove content as it is related to COVID. You do 
not think that the government was engaged in suppressing 
information in any way?
    Mr. Kaye. Well, we know there was--because there is Supreme 
Court cases around this, where the allegation was that 
officials in both administrations, the Trump and Biden 
Administrations, did put some pressure on the companies in 
terms of public health messaging. There's no question about 
that.
    I think the Court found that this didn't constitute 
unlawful pressure or coercion. Clearly, those kinds of messages 
were part of the period of 2020-2021.
    Mr. Knott. Do you condemn that? Do you affirm that action 
by regulating content, or no?
    Mr. Kaye. Do I--
    Mr. Knott. Do you affirm the motivations or the actions of 
the Biden Administration to suppress the COVID discussions?
    Mr. Kaye. No. There needs to be clear back-and-forth and 
information-sharing between government and the largest 
platforms that shape the information environment. Of course you 
don't want coercion, but I think you have to find the balance 
where that kind of back-and-forth can exist.
    Mr. Knott. Well, I'm sure you're aware that they say they 
were coerced by the Biden Administration.
    Mr. Kaye. I think--
    Mr. Knott. It appears to be a partisan interpretation when 
you say that it was reasonable what Biden did with Facebook, 
with X, and so forth.
    Mr. Kaye. Well, we could go back and forth, but in my view 
is that that wasn't coercion, actually.
    Mr. Knott. If you could say--if you could type on Facebook, 
``These vaccines do not work,'' would that have been allowed?
    Mr. Kaye. Honestly, I think it would--
    Mr. Knott. No, it would be stripped. It would be stripped--
    Mr. Kaye. It would depend on when we're talking about.
    Mr. Knott. Under Biden, it would've been stripped. I'm 
sorry, our time's up, but--anyway.
    Mr. Kaye. Mr. Chair, may I have just one very brief--
    Chair Jordan. Of course.
    Mr. Kaye. Yes. Thank you.
    I just want to make one point about hate speech, because 
there's been a lot of discussion about hate speech here, and 
it's valuable for us to at least understand the basis for where 
these hate speech laws come from.
    Most of the language from the international law on hate 
speech, particularly in Europe, was a result of the use of 
propaganda to target Jews and others during the Nazi Holocaust. 
Quite a bit of the hate speech is actually a response to that 
history.
    At least acknowledging that this is a part of the cultural 
freedom-of-expression background in Europe is useful so that 
it's not just a kind of bullying--
    Chair Jordan. Fair enough. Fair enough.
    Mr. Kaye. --of Europeans but also an understanding of where 
they come from.
    Chair Jordan. Yes. Mr. Price made the point--I think his 
last comments made the point about a two-tiered system which 
they see versus--how certain Christians get treated versus how 
people of a different faith get treated. If you even use that 
term, ``two-tiered system,'' you can be criticized for using 
the term about something that many people think exists 
currently in the U.K. and in the EU. There's been lots of 
comments there.
    I'll give the Ranking Member some time, and then I've got 
maybe one last question--one last point I would like to make.
    Mr. Raskin. Thanks. This is just for a UC request, Mr. 
Chair, because you had mentioned the outreach that you'd gotten 
from Mark Zuckerberg, and this is an article about that, ``Meta 
to Pay $25 Million to Settle 2021 Trump Lawsuit.'' The sentence 
that stuck out to me was, ``The President signaled that the 
litigation had to be resolved before Zuckerberg could be 
`brought into the tent,' '' one of the people said.
    I just want to introduce that.
    Chair Jordan. Without objection.
    Mr. Raskin. One other thing is just the Supreme Court 
decision, Murthy v. Missouri, disproving the government 
censorship claims.
    Chair Jordan. OK. Without objection. I'll just make one 
maybe final point, because it's been brought up several times, 
I believe.
    I'll ask all of you. Mr. Kaye, has President Trump banned 
any books in the country? Are you aware of any?
    Mr. Kaye. I don't know about him specifically, but I do 
know that, for example, from ``Defense of Libraries'' (ph)--
books on Martin Luther King have actually been removed.
    Chair Jordan. Mr. Price, do you know--do you know if 
President Trump has banned any books?
    Mr. Price. I'm not aware that he has.
    Chair Jordan. Mr. Reed, has President Trump banned any 
books?
    My understanding, the way it works is, you've got a local 
library board, you've got a local school board, and then they 
say certain books aren't appropriate for kids, which is, 
frankly, the argument they use in the EU on the Digital 
Services Act and U.K. on the Online Safety Act.
    No President's banning books. They're just saying--local 
library board is saying second-graders should maybe not see 
certain things that adults can see.
    Mr. Raskin. Mr. Chair, if I could followup on that?
    Chair Jordan. Sure.
    Mr. Raskin. Because I've got constituents who are in the 
service abroad, and there are schools called DoDEA schools, 
Department of Defense schools. There was an Executive Order 
applying to the Department of Defense, and they shut down the 
school libraries there. These are Federal schools, not local 
schools, Federal schools. They stripped all kinds of books from 
there.
    There have been protests throughout Europe by American 
families over there saying that they don't want, ``1984'' and 
``The Handmaid's Tale'' to be stripped from the schools. I 
mentioned that, actually, in my opening statement.
    Chair Jordan. I want to thank each of our witnesses for 
being here today. I appreciate your patience, and appreciate 
you being here for, wow, five hours. Thank you very much.
    This concludes today's hearing, and we thank our witnesses 
for appearing before the Committee.
    Without objection, all Members will have five legislative 
days to submit additional written questions for the witnesses 
or additional materials for the record.
    Mr. Raskin. Can I say one more thing, Mr. Chair, in praise 
of you?
    Chair Jordan. OK.
    Mr. Raskin. I might have designed it differently, but I 
want to thank you for organizing a very interesting trip for us 
and this hearing as well.
    Chair Jordan. Without objection--thank you. Without 
objection, the hearing is adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 2:55 p.m., the Committee was adjourned.]

    All materials submitted for the record by Members of the 
Committee on the Judiciary can be found at: https://
docs.house.gov/Committee/Calendar/ByEvent.aspx?EventID=118565.

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