Share this @internewscast.com

At least eight prominent X accounts belonging to journalists, a podcast host and leftist posters were suspended Tuesday in what platform head Elon Musk suggested was an accident.

The accounts, which were restored within hours, all have over 75,000 followers and are known to be left-leaning. The temporary bans drove immediate claims of censorship from some X users online, who pointed to past instances in which the platform suspended similar types of users.

In a reply post on X, Musk seemed to suggest the bans were an accidental overstep of a routine sweep for spam and scam accounts. “We do sweeps for spam/scam accounts and sometimes real accounts get caught up in them,” he wrote.

A representative for X did not respond to a request for comment.

Musk, who has increasingly embraced conservatives and their messaging, has routinely championed X as a platform for free speech. 

But X has suspended and then reversed the suspensions of other prominent journalists and left-leaning accounts, including CNN reporter Donie O’Sullivan and Washington Post reporter Drew Harwell in December 2022.

X also briefly suspended the account for Mastodon, an emerging alternative to the platform. At the time, Musk claimed that suspended accounts would regain their access after seven days (many were restored earlier) and that they had posted his real-time location (most of the accounts disputed that).

Most of the prominent left-leaning accounts that have been suspended from X throughout Musk’s leadership have been restored. But some users — including the anarchist platform It’s Going Down and the leftist meme account “JUNlPER” — have been “permanently suspended” under the tech billionaire’s leadership of X. 

Two of the users the platform suspended Tuesday told NBC News that they are skeptical of Musk’s explanation that their now-reversed bans were most likely accidents.

“That strikes me as highly implausible, if not impossible,” said Steven Monacelli, a journalist and correspondent for the Texas Observer whose account was among the at least eight that were removed. “If it is possible, it is a reflection of how terrible the state of engineering has become on this platform.”

Rob Rousseau, another of the people whose accounts were suspended and restored Tuesday, said he can only speculate about why his account was removed. He and Monacelli suggested their prominent criticism of Musk could have been a factor.

“They might just be accounts that Elon Musk found personally annoying,” said Rousseau, who hosts a podcast and streams on Twitch. 

The people behind the six other accounts that were suspended Tuesday had also at times been highly critical of Musk. Some were also vocal about other recent hot-button topics, like the Israel-Hamas war and billionaire Bill Ackman, who crusaded against Harvard University President Claudine Gay until she resigned in a plagiarism scandal and has since targeted Business Insider for reporting allegations that Ackman’s wife committed plagiarism. 

One of the accounts, that of an anonymous leftist poster who goes by “zei_squirrel” and has over 200,000 followers, posted about Israel and Ackman on X immediately after having been restored. 

“I want to thank Elon for giving me my account back. I’ll be more careful and responsible with what I say about him, the Israeli regime and its agents like Bill Ackman and Bari Weiss. I’m genuinely sorry,” the account wrote. “LOL just kidding, I’ll go 100 times as hard in exposing their propaganda now.”

Other affected accounts included those of journalists Ken Klippenstein and Alan MacLeod, liberal Ryan Shead and the parody account “Liam Nissan,” as well as the account for the podcast “True Anon,” which discusses the Jeffrey Epstein case. 

Several of these accounts did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday.

The Texas Observer’s interim executive director, Loren Lynch, said in a statement to NBC News that the organization was “surprised to learn this morning that Steven [Monacelli] had been suspended with little to no explanation, but are pleased that he and the other journalists that experienced this have had their accounts restored.”

Before the accounts were restored, Musk responded to a post claiming that the eight accounts were critical of Israel, writing that he would investigate why they were suspended. 

Shead posted in response that he is not anti-Israel. 

Monacelli said that while he has criticized the Israeli government’s actions that resulted in the deaths of many journalists and civilians, he would not describe his account as primarily anti-Israel or primarily focused on being critical of Israel. 

“It’s all pure speculation,” Monacelli said. “If we were to speculate, I think the logic that has the least number of steps and assumptions, it would be that we posted things that were critical of Elon Musk.” 

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
Taiwan conducts live-fire drills with US-made tanks as president looks on

Taiwan Holds Live-Fire Exercises with US Tanks Under President’s Watchful Eye

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te presided over the island’s military conducting live-fire drills…
Carolina Wilga, found safe.

Farmer Recounts Discovering Lost German Backpacker Who Survived by Sleeping in a Cave

THE hero farmer who found a missing backpacker in the Australian Outback…
Rachel Reeves, British Chancellor of the Exchequer, walking in London.

Rachel Reeves Plans to Emulate Margaret Thatcher with Deregulation Pledge to Revitalize the Economy

RACHEL Reeves will promise to usher in a Thatcher-style “Big Bang” in…
Biggest piece of Mars on Earth could bring in millions at auction

Massive Mars Meteorite Expected to Fetch Millions at Auction

The natural history-themed sale on Wednesday features a 54-pound hunk of Mars…
Marine hopeful found dead on roadside after holiday party may have been 'beat to death,' lawsuit claims

Lawsuit Suggests Marine Hopeful May Have Been ‘Beaten to Death’ After Holiday Party, Found Dead on Roadside

A young Marine candidate from Oklahoma, who was tragically discovered dead and…
Inside Dance Force Elite's preparation for 2025 Bud Billiken Parade on Martin Luther King Drive in Bronzeville, Chicago

A Look into Dance Force Elite’s Prep for the 2025 Bud Billiken Parade on MLK Drive, Bronzeville, Chicago

CHICAGO (WLS) — The Bud Billiken Parade is the largest African American…
Pope Leo XIV gives autographed jersey to White Sox player from 2005 World Series team

Pope Leo XIV Presents Signed Jersey to Member of the 2005 White Sox World Series Team

In a reversal of roles, a fan has signed a jersey for…
Search for Texas flooding victims paused as heavy rain prompts Kerr County Flash Flood Warning; Guadalupe River corridor evacuated

Search for Missing Texas Flood Victims Halted; Kerr County Issues Flash Flood Warning After Intense Rain, Evacuation Along Guadalupe River

KERRVILLE, Texas — More heavy rains in Texas on Sunday paused a…
Former NHL player Joe Pavelski wins the celebrity American Century Championship

Ex-NHL Star Joe Pavelski Claims Victory at Celebrity American Century Championship

The golf event included famous athletes, actors, musicians and more. In South…
Connor Zilisch snags historic Xfinity Series win in Sonoma after close race against teammate

Connor Zilisch Achieves Historic Xfinity Series Victory in Sonoma Following Tight Battle with Teammate

(NEXSTAR) — Connor Zilisch edged out his teammate, Shane van Gisberge,n to…
Gunman kills 2, wounds 2 at Lexington church after shooting Kentucky state trooper

Gunman Opens Fire at Lexington Church: 2 Killed, 2 Injured Following Shooting of Kentucky State Trooper

A suspect launched a shooting spree in Kentucky on Sunday, injuring a…
Fed-up woman refuses to be breakfast chef for sister's children: 'Go ask your mom'

Exasperated Woman Declines Making Breakfast for Sister’s Kids: ‘Ask Your Mom Instead’

A woman recently vented her frustrations over a food-related family conflict to…