Undersecretary Rogers' Memo Ignites U.S.–U.K. Row Over UK NGO Pressuring U.S. Platforms
- Sarah Rogers filed a memo accusing the Center for Countering Digital Hate of weaponizing national security to censor Americans. • She urged extraterritorial regulations and framed visa revocations as countering foreign actors influencing U.S. platform speech. • Her filing elevated an immigration case into a diplomatic dispute, linking content moderation to U.S.–U.K. foreign policy.
Transatlantic row deepens as U.S. accuses British activist network of pressuring platforms
State Department documents and a senior undersecretary’s memo are intensifying a diplomatic spat over allegations that a British nonprofit and its CEO are pressuring U.S. tech companies to remove American content. The claims, lodged as part of a federal immigration action in New York, frame the dispute as more than an enforcement matter and as a potential foreign‑policy concern affecting U.S.–U.K. relations.
Rogers memo frames digital influence as national security tool
Undersecretary Sarah Rogers is central to the development, filing a memo that asserts Imran Ahmed and the Center for Countering Digital Hate are “key collaborators with the Biden administration on weaponizing the national security bureaucracy to censor U.S. citizens and pressure U.S. companies into censoring.” Rogers urges extraterritorial regulatory measures and frames visa revocations announced in late December as part of an effort to counter foreign actors who she says are influencing speech on American platforms. Her filing, included in a Feb. 6 government submission to a New York federal court, elevates what might otherwise be an administrative immigration action into a policy dispute over how the United States responds to transnational content moderation campaigns.
Rogers’ posture is notable for linking domestic content moderation to diplomatic fallout. The memo and supporting statements by Secretary Marco Rubio contend the Center’s activities target U.S. outlets and could have “potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences,” language that signals the State Department is treating the case as implicating bilateral ties and global governance of platforms. By advocating regulatory responses that reach beyond U.S. borders, Rogers and other officials are testing the limits of U.S. influence over how social media companies and foreign NGOs interact, and are prompting debate over the scope of governmental involvement in moderating online speech.
Legal fight and political entanglements widen the stakes
Ahmed is mounting a legal challenge to block his removal, assembling high‑profile counsel including Roberta Kaplan and Norm Eisen and filing an updated complaint last Thursday that argues the actions violate First Amendment and due‑process rights. He maintains the Center’s mission is combating online hate and disinformation.
Links between the Center and U.K. politics magnify diplomatic sensitivity. Co‑founder Morgan McSweeney is tied to senior figures in Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s circle, and leaked Center documents reportedly describe campaigns against platforms and outlets that critics say amount to coordinated pressure. Those ties make the case a flashpoint in transatlantic debates over censorship, platform governance and the reach of national security prerogatives into digital speech.