YouTube to reinstate accounts banned over content related to the Pandemic and 2020 election

Tripp Mickle
The New York Times
YouTube says it will restore accounts banned over COVID and election misinformation, pushing back on what it calls government pressure to police speech.
YouTube says it will restore accounts banned over COVID and election misinformation, pushing back on what it calls government pressure to police speech. Credit: AAP

YouTube will create a process to reinstate the accounts of content creators whose profiles were banned in recent years because they violated rules that limited misinformation about COVID-19 and the 2020 election.

The streaming platform revealed its plans to restore creators’ accounts Tuesday in a letter to the US House Judiciary Committee.

The change comes as YouTube has started relaxing its content moderation rules, increasing the threshold for offending content and modifying rules on COVID misinformation.

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The letter was submitted by Alphabet, YouTube’s parent company, in response to a lengthy investigation by Republicans into whether tech companies restricted speech on their platforms at the behest of the Biden administration.

It was part of a broader attack by Republicans, which also included a lawsuit against the Biden administration for chilling speech online.

In the letter, Alphabet said that the streaming platform had faced pressure from the Biden administration to remove content that didn’t violate its policies. It said that such government pressure to police speech was “unacceptable and wrong” and that the company “has consistently fought against those efforts on free speech grounds.”

“The company has a commitment to freedom of expression,” said Daniel Donovan, a lawyer from King & Spaulding who wrote the letter for Alphabet. “This commitment is unwavering and will not bend to political pressure.”

Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda referred to the letter and declined to comment. The letter was earlier reported by Fox News.

YouTube, which has more than 2 billion users worldwide, said in its letter that it “values conservative voices on its platform and recognizes that these creators have extensive reach and play an important role in civic discourse.”

YouTube acknowledged government pressure to police speech at a time when Democrats and some Republicans have accused the Trump administration of pressuring media companies to curb speech on television. Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr last week threatened ABC because of remarks late-night host Jimmy Kimmel made about right-wing activist Charlie Kirk. ABC suspended Kimmel’s show hours later.

ABC said “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” will return to its airwaves Tuesday.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2025 The New York Times Company

Originally published on The New York Times

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