WASHINGTON — Conservative provocateur Alex Jones stormed Capitol Hill on Wednesday and held court outside a Senate hearing where tech executives from Facebook and Twitter were testifying.

Jones, who has been censored on social media, said he was in Washington to “face his accusers” and demand that conservative and libertarian voices be heard. He predicted action by President Trump and others within “two weeks” to crack down on tech giants for what he described as political persecution.

“Judgment day politically is here,” a red-faced and sweating Jones told reporters. “Attempts to intimidate the American people, attempts to silence us and bully me and others into submission in this globalist system are not going to work.”

Jones, who runs the InfoWars conspiracy website, had been sued by families of Sandy Hook victims for defamation over allegedly claiming the mass shooting was a fake.

Last month, Twitter banned Jones from the platform for seven days for violating its policies.

Jones says the mainstream media has taken his comments out of context and tech companies are colluding with Democrats to take down right-wing voices. He suggested an anti-trust crackdown on tech companies, increased regulations and charging companies with campaign finance violations because by shutting down competitors’ voices, they’ve given “billions of dollars in gifts to Democrats.”

“We have been getting information to the president, briefs on this. I told people a month ago he was going to take action. He started doing that,” Jones said of Trump.

Jones is allied with Roger Stone, a former Trump political confidante. Trump helped legitimatize Jones when he did an interview with the presidential hopeful in 2015.

Trump has accused the tech companies of filtering conservative news in favor of liberal publications and said the “serious situation … will be addressed!”

“The president needs to move forward with a push for a blue ribbon commission on defense of the First Amendment,” Jones said. “He needs to move now with executive orders exposing this new kind of campaign finance violation and in-kind gifts to the Democrats by big tech.”

Inside the hearing, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg were testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee on what they are doing to prevent election meddling. Larry Page, CEO of Google’s parent company, Alphabet, declined an invitation to come. Committee leaders left an empty seat at the witness table.

“I’m disappointed that Google decided against sending the right senior-level executive to participate,” Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.) said.