<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/sep/29/youtube-trump-lawsuit-settlement>


YouTube agrees to pay Trump $24.5m to settle lawsuit over account suspension

Dara Kerr


YouTube has agreed to pay $24.5m to settle a suit brought by Donald Trump in 
2021 that alleged the platform wrongly suspended his channel after the January 
6 attack on the US Capitol. The Google subsidiary is the latest in a long 
string of tech companies to make a multimillion-dollar payout to the president 
over past decisions about his accounts.

Trump had filed the suit against YouTube and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, 
alleging that the platform had “accumulated an unprecedented concentration of 
power, market share, and ability to dictate our nation’s public discourse”. 
YouTube said it suspended Trump’s channel because it had violated the website’s 
policies against inciting violence. Because of the settlement, the case is now 
dismissed. Google did not immediately return a request for comment.

The news comes just a week after YouTube announced that it would allow creators 
who were once banned for spreading misinformation about Covid-19 and the 2020 
US presidential election to be reinstated. In its announcement, YouTube said it 
celebrated conservative voices on its site and blamed the account suspensions 
on pressure from Joe Biden.

Facebook-parent company Meta settled a similar lawsuit with Trump in January 
for $25m, and the social media platform X, previously Twitter, settled another 
for $10m in February. Most of the payout from the Meta suit will go to Trump’s 
presidential library fund. For the YouTube settlement, Trump has directed $22m 
of the payment to go to restoring and preserving the National Mall and 
supporting construction of the White House ballroom, according to documents 
filed in the US district court for the northern district of California. The 
lavish ballroom is expected to cost around $200m.

The three cases were first brought by Trump lawyer and ally, John Coale, 
according to the Wall Street Journal, which first reported the news. Coale told 
the Journal that Trump’s return to the White House was instrumental in reaching 
the slew of settlements with tech companies, saying: “If he had not been 
re-elected, we would have been in court for 1,000 years.” Coale is now Trump’s 
deputy special envoy to Ukraine and Belarus.

In an email to the Guardian, Coale said Trump was an “ideal client”.

“Glad it and the others I filled [sic] for DJT in July or [sic] 2021 ended to 
the tune of 60mil,” Coale added. “We got $$$ and changed tech behavior I 
believe.”

The case against YouTube had been closed in 2023, but Trump’s lawyers filed to 
reopen the case after he won the presidency. Before his victory, all three of 
the lawsuits faced uphill court battles. A federal judge dismissed the case 
against Twitter in 2022, and the suits against Meta and YouTube were stayed, 
then the latter was administratively close. Trump’s lawyers, however, revived 
the cases with appeals to overturn each ruling.

YouTube first suspended Trump’s channel for seven days on 12 January 2021, 
after he posted a video saying the speech he made to his supporters on January 
6 before the Capitol riot was “totally appropriate”. YouTube said it suspended 
the channel over “concerns about the ongoing potential for violence”. The 
company then extended the ban without an end date.



It wasn’t until March 2023, after Trump announced his bid for his second 
presidency, that YouTube reinstated Trump’s channel, saying it “carefully 
evaluated the continued risk of real-world violence, balancing that with the 
importance of preserving the opportunity for voters to hear equally from major 
national candidates in the run up to an election”.

Within hours of getting his channel back, Trump posted: “I’M BACK!” accompanied 
by an 11-second video of him talking at a rally saying: “Sorry to keep you 
waiting. Complicated business. Complicated.”

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