The problem with Trump’s new media company

For the moment, investors seem wildly optimistic about the new media company Donald Trump is forming. Shares of little-known Digital World Acquisition Corp. (DWAC) soared 350% in one day after the shell company said it was merging with a new Trump entity aiming to build a social-media platform, a streaming operation and more.

That could be the peak, however. Trump obviously has a massive following, but it’s important to keep in mind that Trump’s popularity comes from his combativeness. He needs enemies and continuously adds new ones to his target list. His willingness to attack anybody who opposes him—and the mainstream political establishment most of all—is the source of his popularity among millions who think the system is corrupt and don’t care if Trump destroys it.

Trump’s war on mainstream culture is most effective when he wages it within the mainstream itself. He did this as president for four years, throwing thunderbolts from one of the loftiest platforms in the world. On Facebook (FB) and Twitter (TWTR), he trashed the very platforms that were hosting him, breaking their rules and daring them to punish him. The audacity and recklessness delighted his millions of followers.

Since losing his 2020 reelection bid, however, Trump has been badly marginalized. Facebook and Twitter now ban him, and the bully pulpit of the presidency now belongs to Trump’s vanquisher, Joe Biden. News organizations are far leerier of giving Trump airtime to spout lies about election fraud and vent his many grievances.

Fringe platform

Trump obviously craves a new platform that will help him regain the spotlight. But “Truth Social”—Trump’s planned social-media site, according to the new company’s prospectus—won’t come close to matching the perch he had on Twitter and Facebook. By its very nature, Truth Social, if it ever materializes, will be a fringe platform for Trump, Trump followers and nobody else. It will be even less ecumenical than Fox News, which sometimes allows alternative views amid its rampant Trumpism.

This illustration photo shows a person checking the app store on a smartphone for
This illustration photo shows a person checking the app store on a smartphone for "Truth Social." Former US president Donald Trump announced plans on October 20 to launch his own social networking platform called "TRUTH Social," which is expected to begin its beta launch for "invited guests" next month. (Photo by Chris DELMAS / AFP) · CHRIS DELMAS via Getty Images

An army of new social-media followers might stroke Trump’s ego, while providing a new vehicle for him to raise political donations he can use to further his role as Republican kingmaker. But Truth Social could also grow tiresome, fast. It will be little more than a Trump echo chamber, giving voice to Trump’s views and nothing more. Critics have already noted that the site’s terms of service require users not to “disparage, tarnish or otherwise harm … the site.” That means the site can ban or mute anybody who disagrees with Trump.