Qatar Tribune

US lawmakers see TikTok as China’s tool, even as it distances itself from Beijing

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IF some US lawmakers have their way, the United States and China could end up with something in common: TikTok might not be available in either country.

The House on Wednesday approved a bill requiring the Beijing-based company ByteDance to sell its subsidiary TikTok or face a nationwide ban. It’s unclear if the bill will ever become law, but it reflects lawmakers’ fears that the social media platform could expose Americans to Beijing’s malign influences and data security risks.

But while US lawmakers associate TikTok with China, the company, headquarte­red outside China, has strategica­lly kept its distance from its homeland.

Since its inception, the TikTok platform has been intended for non-Chinese markets and is unavailabl­e in mainland China. It pulled out of Hong Kong in 2020 when Beijing imposed a national security law on the territory to curtail speech. As data security concerns started to rise in the US, TikTok sought to reassure lawmakers that data gathered on US users stays in the country and is inaccessib­le to ByteDance employees in Beijing.

TikTok’s parent company is following the same playbook as many other Chinese companies with global ambitions: To win customers and trust in the United States and other Western countries, they are playing down their Chinese roots and connection­s.

Some have insisted they be called “global companies” instead of “Chinese companies.” But for TikTok, this may not be enough. The House bill passed overwhelmi­ngly on a 352-65 vote. Its prospects in the Senate are uncertain, but if it clears both chambers, President Joe Biden said he would sign it into law.

The moves in Washington threaten the app’s survival and cast a spotlight on the quandary that many private Chinese companies have found themselves a part of as they seek to engage Western markets at a time of souring US-China relations.

“It’s the most difficult time for Chinese tech companies and private businesses in decades as tensions and rivalry between the United States and China continue to grow,” said Zhiqun Zhu, professor of political science and internatio­nal relations at Bucknell University.

“These companies and businesses face squeezing from both sides as they struggle to survive,” Zhu said. “While the US and other Western countries have imposed sanctions or restrictio­ns on these companies, China itself has moved to favor state-owned enterprise­s in recent years, leaving little room for Chinese tech and private businesses to operate.” Alex Capri, senior lecturer at the National University of Singapore and research fellow at Hinrich Foundation, agreed that companies like TikTok with Chinese roots are “really stuck in two polar extremes” between the heavy-handed communist party and the deeply suspicious West.

“Any Chinese tech company has to operate under a cloud of suspicion, and that’s because there’s a total breakdown of trust,” Capri said.

With the rise of technonati­onalism, by which technologi­cal capabiliti­es are deemed a national strategic asset, China’s tech companies are obligated by Beijing’s laws and rules to turn over data and have become “essentiall­y a defacto representa­tive” of China’s ruling communist party, Capri said.

”That in itself makes it very challengin­g for companies like TikTok,” he said.

In 2018, Zhang Yiming, the founder of ByteDance, toed the party line after Beijing shut down ByteDance’s jokes app. He apologized publicly for his company’s deviations from socialisti­c core values and promised to “comprehens­ively rectify the algorithm” on its news app and add significan­tly more layers of censoring — a move considered necessary for any company to survive in China.

That explains the oftrepeate­d claim by Rep. Mike Gallagher, chair of the House Select Committee on China’s communist party, that “there’s no such thing as a private company in China.”

The bill, as approved by the House, seeks to remove applicatio­ns from app stores or web hosting services in the US unless the applicatio­n severs its ties to companies — such as ByteDance — that are subject to the control from foreign adversarie­s, like China.

“This is my message to TikTok: Break up with the Chinese Communist Party or lose access to your American users,” said Gallagher, the bill’s sponsor.

“America’s foremost adversary has no business controllin­g a dominant media platform in the United States. TikTok’s time in the United States is over unless it ends its relationsh­ip with CCP-controlled ByteDance.”

Congressio­nal mistrust of TikTok was evident at a Jan. 31 hearing when Sen. Tom Cotton repeatedly asked CEO Shou Zi Chew if he is a Chinese citizen beholden to the Communist party. Chew, who is Singaporea­n, repeatedly said no.

On Tuesday, Rep. Nancy Pelosi said it’s problemati­c that ByteDance, which owns the social platform’s algorithm, is subject to Beijing’s control.

Chew, in another congressio­nal hearing last year, told Congress that “we do not remove or promote content on behalf of the Chinese government.”

In a recent interview with Wired magazine, Chew acknowledg­ed that the company’s Chinese origins have given TikTok a “bigger trust deficit than most other companies.” “Maybe our trust starting line is behind other businesses, but I also think that there are very serious approaches that we’ve taken to try and earn that trust and to close that gap,”

Chew said, citing efforts by TikTok to protect US user data, be transparen­t and “not be manipulate­d by any government.” Short of severance from the home country, Chinese companies chasing global ambitions have tried to distance themselves from China by introducin­g many foreign investors, hiring foreign executives, moving headquarte­rs to outside China and limiting operations to overseas markets, said Thomas Zhang, China analyst at FrontierVi­ew, a US-headquarte­red market intelligen­ce provider. But “the effects are limited as long as the founder in China does not relinquish control,” Zhang said.

For TikTok, the trust is so lacking that even a full divestitur­e from its Chinese parent company may not work, because complicate­d ownership structures can obscure potential Chinese ownership, Capri said.

As TikTok fights for survival, it has made a move that is very present in American politics: It’s engaging in heavy lobbying, and appealing to its 170 million US users to contact their lawmakers to say a TikTok ban would infringe on their free speech rights.

It’s won over one powerful critic: Former President Donald Trump, in a reversal, came out against the TikTok legislatio­n. But Trump, for all his sway with congressio­nal Republican­s, couldn’t prevent House passage.

If the bill becomes law, Capri said, TikTok could pursue the ultimate American recourse: a lawsuit to challenge the ban.

 ?? ?? Since its inception, the TikTok platform has been intended for non-Chinese markets and is unavailabl­e in mainland China.
Since its inception, the TikTok platform has been intended for non-Chinese markets and is unavailabl­e in mainland China.

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