The second Republican presidential debate will be broadcast Wednesday on Fox Business Network and Univision, but the exclusive online livestream will take place on Rumble, an alternative video-sharing platform that has been criticized for allowing— and at times promoting — far-right extremism, bigotry, election disinformation and conspiracy theories.

By bringing viewers to Rumble to watch the GOP debate, as it did with the first one last month, the Republican National Committee is driving potential voters to a site crawling with content that flouts the rules of more mainstream ones such as Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

Earlier this year, RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said using Rumble instead of YouTube as its livestreaming partner was a decision aimed toward " getting away from Big Tech.”

Asked about the criticism against the platform, the RNC said in an emailed statement that “hate, bigotry and violence is unfortunately prevalent on every social media platform, and the RNC condemns it entirely, but the RNC does not manage content or pages outside of our own.”

Rumble, founded in 2013, prides itself on being “immune to cancel culture.” Its website says “everyone benefits when we have access to more ideas, diverse opinions, and dialogue.”

  • @[email protected]
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    221 year ago

    This is the real answer.

    The others may be true, but the debate runners and the GOP party leaders know some crazy shit is going to be said at one point or another, and they want to be able to selectively present it.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Its really tough for me to say this. I was born and raised conservative, i.e. republican. It wasnt until Trump became a serious candidate in 2016 that i started to question their motives. I still consider myself conservative, but i cant bring myself to agree with anything the gop has done in the last decade.