Donald Trump might start tweeting again soon, a confidante of the former president has revealed.
Advisers for his 2024 presidential campaign have been workshopping ideas for what his first post should be, according to NBC News.
Mr Trump had been banned from Twitter in the aftermath of the Capitol riots – but was allowed back on the platform following Elon Musk’s takeover.
A Republican, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations with Mr Trump about returning to the platform, said: “Trump is probably coming back to Twitter. It’s just a question of how and when.
“He’s been talking about it for weeks, but Trump speaks for Trump, so it’s anyone’s guess what he’ll do or say or when.”
The former president has also told Fox News that he is in talks with Meta about a possible return to Facebook and Instagram.
He said: “We are talking to them, and we’ll see how it all works out.
“If they took us back, it would help them greatly, and that’s okay with me. But they need us more than we need them.”
Facebook said Mr Trump’s ban would be reviewed after two years when it was imposed in January 2021 – with that review date coming on 7 January 2023.
The social media giant said at the time the ban was imposed that Mr Trump would only be allowed back on the platform if the “risk to public safety” had receded.
“We believe that the ban on President Trump’s account on Facebook has dramatically distorted and inhibited the public discourse,” Mr Trump’s campaign wrote in a letter to Meta on Tuesday, according to a copy reviewed by NBC News.
Mr Trump’s campaign didn’t threaten a lawsuit, as some sources close to him thought he would.
It instead talked about the importance of free speech and petitioned Meta for a “meeting to discuss President Trump’s prompt reinstatement to the platform”.
A Meta spokesperson declined to comment about Mr Trump beyond saying the company “will announce a decision in the coming weeks in line with the process we laid out”.
An adviser of Mr Trump’s who spoke to NBC News said his campaign believes Facebook will reinstate him.
House Democrats, including Adam Schiff of California, told Facebook last month to keep Mr Trump off the platform.
Mr Trump’s plans to expand his social media footprint also speak to the low reach of Truth Social – the platform he created to reach supporters.
The former US president has slightly more than 4.8 million followers on the platform, compared with nearly 88 million on Twitter and 34 million on Facebook.
Facebook was crucial to Mr Trump’s success in 2016, when his campaign used computer programming to tailor ads to viewers’ data – called microtargeting – which helped him raise money with small-dollar donors and out-message Democrat Hillary Clinton’s campaign.
An internal Facebook report found that Mr Trump ran 5.9 million different versions of ads, compared with 66,000 for Clinton, according to Bloomberg News.