Twitter labels Trump tweet for 'making a potentially misleading claim'

Twitter slapped a warning label on an election-night tweet from President Donald Trump, for ā€œmaking a potentially misleading claim about an election.ā€ In the tweet, Trump claimed that ā€œthey are trying to STEAL the Election,ā€ and that ā€œVotes cannot be cast after the Polls are closed.ā€

The label appears in place of the tweet in usersā€™ timelines, though they can still click through to view it. ā€œSome or all of the content shared in this Tweet is disputed and might be misleading about an election or other civic process,ā€ the notice says. Users are also blocked from retweeting, though they can still share it with a Quote Tweet.

In a statement shared shortly after the label appeared, Twitter confirmed the tweet had broken its rules around ā€œmaking a potentially misleading claim about an election.ā€ The company previously said it would label tweets that break its rules around declaring victory prematurely, or making false claims about the election or ballot-counting process.

On Facebook, where Trump posted the same message, Facebook applied a more vague label that says ā€œfinal results may be different from initial vote counts, as ballot counting will continue for days or weeks.ā€ The social network also labeled another Trump post, which said ā€œI will be making a statement tonight. A big WIN!ā€ That post bears a similar notice that ā€œballots are still being counted,ā€ and a winner has not been projected. Twitter has so far opted to not label that tweet.

Facebook also labeled a post from Trump, but the language is more vague. Ā· (Screenshot/Facebook)

Trumpā€™s claims were among the first major test of social media platformā€™s election-night policies, which both Facebook and Twitter have spent months preparing for. Earlier in the night, Twitter labeled a tweet from Trumpā€™s campaign about the results in South Carolina. Both companies previously said they would not allow either presidential candidate to declare victory before results are clear, and that they would rely on state election officials and national media organizations to make those calls.