YouTube has blocked Donald Trump from uploading new content to his official channel for at least a week.
The video-sharing platform, owned by Google, said the move comes in light of "concerns about the ongoing potential for violence."
The president has already been blocked from Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Snap after his supporters stormed Capitol Hill last week.
Five people including a police officer died after Trump addressed the crowds and continued to push his unfounded claims of election fraud at a "Stop the Steal" demonstration on Wednesday, which quickly turned into a violent siege on the Capitol.
House Democrats have now introduced articles of impeachment against Trump, saying he "engaged in high Crimes and Misdemeanors by inciting violence against the Government of the United States." The House is expected to vote on impeachment on Wednesday.
Pressure to ban the president had been building on YouTube after Facebook and Twitter did the same following last week's violent riots in the nation's capital. Not only were social media users calling for the move, but Google's own workers' union—Alphabet Workers Union—sent an open letter to YouTube executives last Thursday, condemning them for what it termed a "lackluster" response in censoring the president's fraudulent election claims and rhetoric.
On Monday morning, the actor and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen also called for YouTube to remove the president. In a tweet that was widely commented on and shared, including by fellow progressive actor Mark Ruffalo, Baron Cohen wrote: "Virtually every social media company has removed Trump...EXCEPT YouTube. Trump's YouTube channel is STILL showing videos of his election lies to MILLIONS of people!" The civil rights coalition Stop Hate for Profit, which seeks to stop hate speech and misinformation on social media platforms, had demanded they remove Trump's verified pages due to his "indisputable pattern of behavior that preceded his calls to violence this week."
But on Tuesday, Trump hit out at the social media giants, telling reporters: "I think that Big Tech is doing a horrible thing for our country and to our country, and I believe it's going to be a catastrophic mistake for them. They're dividing and divisive."
Trump had earlier sent a series of tweets from the official @POTUS account in an attempt to circumvent his Twitter ban, accusing the company of stifling free speech. But Twitter soon deleted the posts, which were captured in screenshots.
"As I have been saying for a long time, Twitter has gone further and further in banning free speech, and tonight, Twitter employees have coordinated with the Democrats and the Radical Left in removing my account from their platform, to silence me — and YOU, the 75,000,000 great patriots who voted for me," Trump wrote.