The Senate Intelligence Committee’s top Democrat is pushing for another hearing on how tech firms are dealing with Russian interference in the 2016 election.
{mosads}Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) has said before that he was interested in bringing technology executives back before his committee after representatives from Facebook, Twitter and Google testified before the Senate Intelligence Committee in November.
Two sources with knowledge of the matter told The Hill that Warner is now taking steps to make the hearing happen.
The focus of the hearing expected to be on how major internet platforms were manipulated during the election and the threat it could happen again.
Details of the hearing, including a date and the companies to be invited have yet to be determined, the sources said. Facebook, Twitter and Google, who all testified in the November hearing, are among the companies that could be invited back.
Tumblr, which is owned by Oath, and Reddit were also used Russian trolls attempting to interfere in the 2016 election. Warner and the Senate Intelligence Committee have shown some interest in their role in election meddling efforts, but have primarily focused on Facebook, Twitter and Google’s platforms.
A spokesperson for Senate Intelligence Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.), who gets the final say in what hearings the committee holds, did not comment on Warner’s efforts.
“Chairman Burr has stated that the committee is examining social media influence as part of it investigation, but we don’t have any details to announce at this time,” a spokesperson for Burr, wrote in an email.
A spokesperson for Warner, also declined to confirm or comment on the specific details of the hearing but said that Warner always intended to bring the companies in for a follow-up.
It’s unclear if technology companies would attend if invited. Representatives from Facebook, Twitter and Google have shown up to hearings held by the Senate Commerce Committee as well as the House Judiciary Committee, but all three skipped a hearing on alleged anti-conservative bias in tech in April. They did, however, attend the follow-up hearing on the subject in July.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg also attended two congressional hearings in April in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal in which it was revealed that the British research firm used by the Trump campaign improperly harvested data of 87 million Facebook users.
President Trump sparked controversy last week during a press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin when he said he believed his denials of interference despite the conclusions of the U.S. intelligence community.
Trump tried to walk those remarks back the next day, saying that he misspoke and believed the intelligence community’s assessment of Russian involvement. But he also added that the hacks could have been by “other people.”
Harper Neidig contributed.