It has been reported that X owner Elon Musk will be summoned to the UK's House of Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee's inquiry into social media, misinformation, and harmful algorithms.
Speaking to POLITICO, chair Chi Onwurah claimed that she "very much hope[d]" Musk would like to talk to the committee as he was "the most senior representative of X" and had "very strong views on misinformation, communication, free speech and society."
Musk is only a champion of freedom of speech when it suits him, on the one hand spewing disinformation on his right-wing propaganda platform while on the other censoring pro-democracy dissidents on behalf of authoritarian states. While poking the bear may be dangerous, it's clear that Musk's incitement of unrest in the UK this summer went too far. The UK must stand up to Musk and remind the tech mogul that, despite what he may think, his words do have consequences.
The UK's crusade against Musk's free speech advocacy is unlikely to end well. The UK government's increasingly hostile approach to personal autonomy is self-evident, and their failed attempts to shut down the ultra-popular tech pioneer is a bad look. Committees can threaten to summon him and Labour activists can propose legal action all they like, but Musk has done no wrong for having a difference of opinion with Starmer's woke premiership.