Elon Musk escalates spat with Starmer, calling him ‘two-tier Keir’

6 August 2024, 16:04

A composite image of Elon Musk and the Prime Minister
Musk-Starmer. Picture: PA

The X chief posted tweets relating to rioting and tagged the Prime Minister after Downing Street criticised him for saying ‘civil war is inevitable’.

Sir Keir Starmer’s spat with Elon Musk has escalated, with the social media boss calling the Prime Minister “two-tier Keir” in a series of new tweets.

Mr Musk reposted a series of images, videos and memes related to ongoing rioting in the UK.

The owner of X, formerly Twitter, tagged Sir Keir in several tweets, writing “Why aren’t all communities protected in Britain?” and “#TwoTierKeir”.

The Prime Minister has rejected claims of “two-tier policing” in Britain after Nigel Farage suggested riots over the last week have been dealt with more harshly than other recent unrest and protests.

Downing Street had criticised Mr Musk for tweeting that “civil war is inevitable” in the UK, with Sir Keir’s official spokesman saying that there was “no justification for comments like that”.

“We’re talking about a minority of thugs who don’t speak for Britain,” he said.

Justice minister Heidi Alexander told Times Radio it was “deeply irresponsible” and that “everyone should be appealing for calm”.

“Use of language such as a ‘civil war’ is in no way acceptable. We are seeing police officers being seriously injured, buildings set alight, and so I really do think that everyone who has a platform should be exercising their power responsibly,” Ms Alexander said.

Mr Musk’s latest retweets included an image what appears to be men in military uniforms and helmets with union jacks superimposed onto their backs approaching a front door, with the caption: “We saw your meme, step outside!”

Michelle Donelan, a former Conservative MP who worked on the Online Safety Act when she was technology secretary, had earlier criticised Sir Keir for “going off on one at Elon Musk”, saying the Prime Minister should focus on engaging with social media platforms.

She told GB News: “I don’t think he’ll do anything in relation to social media.

“We’ve done the Online Safety Act, which is the most comprehensive Bill in this space in the world.”

Offences around incitement in UK law were in place long before the social media age, and fall under the Public Order Act 1986, but stronger measures are on the way in the form of the Online Safety Act, which passed into law in 2023 but is yet to come into full effect.

It will require social media firms to take more robust action against illegal and harmful content and activity on their platforms.

But Sir Keir’s spokesman said on Monday that social media firms have a responsibility to make sure their users are safe and that criminal activity is not being posted on their platforms.

He said: “They shouldn’t be waiting for the Online Safety Act for that.”

A mosque in Southport and a Citizens Advice office and police station in Sunderland are among buildings that have been damaged during days of clashes between anti-immigration demonstrators, police and counter-protesters.

Ms Alexander also said the Government was taking a “very robust approach” to social media companies and that being behind a computer or mobile phone screen would offer no protection from the law.

The justice minister told Sky News: “There has been some welcome action where there has been automated removal of some false information, but I do think the social media companies could and should be doing more.

“They have got a moral responsibility not to be propagating and disseminating misleading and inflammatory content on their platforms.”

On Monday, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said he had met representatives from TikTok, Facebook’s parent company Meta, Google, and X “to make clear their responsibility to continue to work with us to stop the spread of hateful misinformation and incitement”.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the Government would not tolerate “armchair thuggery” and that social media platforms needed to take responsibility for the spread of online misinformation which has fuelled much of the disorder.

By Press Association

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