Mark Meckler, an attorney, political activist, and founder of the Tea Party Patriots, is now interim CEO of Parler. Rod Lamkey / Stringer Parler has relaunched with a Tea Party Patriots co-founder at the top. The social-media platform was taken offline by Amazon Web Services in January.  The site, a favorite for the far-right, was found to be a planning hub for Capitol insurrectionists. Parler, the preferred social media platform for the far-right, announced Monday that it was back online after it was dropped by an Amazon hosting service on January 11.  The site became a haven for pro-Trump extremists ahead of, and during, the Capitol insurrection. Amazon Web Services (AWS) found that it “poses a very real risk to public safety.” On Monday, the company announced that site was up and running with a Tea Party co-founder serving as interim CEO. Mark Meckler, an attorney, political activist, and founder of the Tea Party Patriots, replaced former CEO and co-founder John Matze, who was fired by the company’s board earlier this month.  In a statement Monday, Meckler said, “Parler was built to offer a social media platform that protects free speech and values privacy and civil discourse,” highlighting the platform’s focus on freedom of speech. “Parler is being run by an experienced team and is here to stay. We will thrive as the premier social media platform dedicated to free speech, privacy and civil dialogue,” the statement said.  According to publicly available WHOIS data, the domain is registered with Epik, which also hosts Gab, another far-right social-media platform.  A spokesperson did not immediately return Insider’s request for comment. Parler is largely funded by Rebekah Mercer, a conservative megadonor whose family was among the most influential backers of then-candidate Donald Trump in 2016. Dan Bongino, a conservative activist, has also said he’s a co-owner

via businessinsider: Parler, a preferred social-media platform for the far-right, is back online with Mark Meckler as interim CEO