Facebook founder spends 30 minutes giving answers to 60 minutes of MEPs’ questions
Mark Zuckerberg’s meeting at the European parliament ended in acrimony, amid a chorus of complaints that the Facebook founder had been allowed to evade questions and give vague answers.
Over the 90-minute session the Facebook founder told MEPs there would be no repeat of the Cambridge Analytica data scandal, as he faced accusations that his company has too much power.
The format meant Zuckerberg spent around 30 minutes giving answers to a 60-minute block of consecutive questions. The 12 MEPs asked dozens of overlapping questions that allowed the Facebook boss to pick and choose his answers. Guy Verhofstadt, the leader of the liberal group, slammed the “pre-cooked format” as “inappropriate” and having ensured Zuckerberg could avoid questions.
Zuckerberg promised his colleague would follow-up with written answers: “I realise there were a lot of specific questions that I didn’t get around to answer,” as he noted the session had run out of time.
Damian Collins, the Conservative MP who chairs the Commons digital, culture, media and sport select committee, which Zuckerberg has refused three times to appear before, tweeted:


54 minutes into the European Parliament's session with Mark Zuckerberg and he has not answered a single question. It is clear why he refused to appear in front of @CommonsCMS
After the hearing, Collins said it had been a “missed opportunity for proper scrutiny” on many crucial questions. “Questions were blatantly dodged on shadow profiles, sharing data between WhatsApp and Facebook, the ability to opt out of political advertising and the true scale of data abuse on the platform.”
“Unfortunately, the format of questioning allowed Mr Zuckerberg to cherry-pick his responses and not respond to each individual point.”
The format is the European parliament’s preferred way of running meetings.
But this time it broke up with tetchy exchanges between the MEPs, led by Verhofstadt, who complained he had received no answers to his charge that Facebook had monopoly power.
Verhofstadt had called on Facebook to cooperate with the EU’s antitrust authorities. “Are you in fact a genius who creates a digital monster that is destroying our societies?” he asked.
Manfred Weber, the leader of the European People’s party centre-right group, the largest in the European parliament, said it was time to discuss breaking up Facebook’s monopoly because “it is already too much power”.
The European parliament has no power to break up Facebook, but theinterventions will increase the pressure on the European commission’s antitrust arm to scrutinise the company more closely.
Zuckerberg said Facebook accounted for 6% of the global advertising market, and he urged MEPs to look through this “important lens”, while talking about 70m small businesses that use Facebook.
He said policies in place since 2014 prevented any app developer from misusing data. But he said Facebook was likely to find other apps that “we [will] want to take down” as part of a shift away from a reactive approach to problems on the site.
“Now what we’re doing is taking a much more proactive approach. We are going through and investigating ourselves up front,” he told MEPs.
It was the latest leg in the Facebook apology tour after the Observer reported that the personal data of tens of millions of people was harvested and shared with the political consultancy Cambridge Analytica. Facebook admitted that the data of 87 million users may have been improperly shared, including that of 1 million users in the UK.
The MEPs touched on issues ranging from terrorism, tax and fake news to data protection rules, false accounts and online bullying.
A few noted their own follower numbers. “I am your best client here in the room,” said Nigel Farage, who boasted he had more Facebook followers than any other MEP.
The former Ukip leader accused Facebook of censoring him and other right-leaning politicians. “Since January this year you’ve changed your algorithms, and it’s led to a substantial drop to views and engagements for those who’ve got right-of-centre political opinions. On average we’re down about 25% over the course of this year,” he said.
“I’m not talking about extremism. What interests me is: who decides what is acceptable? Who are these third-party fact-checkers? Why is there no transparency in this process?”
Farage had a place at the questioners’ table as he leads the Eurosceptic Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy group. The panel comprised 12 MEPs who lead the parliament’s political groups, plus the European parliament president, Antonio Tajani.
In his opening remarks Zuckerberg stuck to the script he used when he faced US lawmakers last month. “In 2016 we were too slow to identify Russian interference in the US presidential election. We weren’t prepared enough for the kind of coordinated misinformation operations we are now aware of,” he said.
The session took place three days before the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation comes into effect. The GDPR, which replaces a 1996 law, boosts people’s rights online, such as by ensuring companies get consent before using data rather than taking silence as assent. Companies breaking the rules can be fined €20bn or 4% of their global turnover.
Zuckerberg said the company expected “to be compliant by May 25th”, having been asked whether Facebook had moved the data of 11.5m users out of reach of the law.
The European commissioner on justice and consumer affairs Vera Jourová said she would be following closely the work of national data protection authorities in enforcing the law. “As of Friday new strong EU data protection rules will be in place. These rules will have teeth and protect Europeans. They come just in time.”
The European commission, which is responsible for drafting EU law, has also warned Facebook and other social media companies that it could draw up regulations to tackle misuse of personal data and misinformation unless they clean up their acts.