Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

E-firms lobby on ad laws, tax code

Spending climbs in past 3 months

- HAMZA SHABAN

WASHINGTON — Facebook, Google and Amazon bolstered their lobbying spending in the past three months as Washington takes a closer look at the market power of some of America’s biggest tech companies.

Facebook spent $2.85 million lobbying the federal government in the third quarter, up 41 percent from the same period last year, according to disclosure reports made public late Friday. Part of that amount was dedicated to lobbying officials in Congress and the White House on “online advertisin­g, content and platform transparen­cy efforts.” The lobbying comes as the social network, Google and Twitter face a new bipartisan push on Capitol Hill that would force Internet companies to disclose more informatio­n about political ads sold and distribute­d on their platforms.

The lawmakers behind proposed advertisin­g transparen­cy legislatio­n said the bill is designed to prevent

another Russian-backed disinforma­tion campaign that ran on an array of Web platforms before the 2016 election. Facebook has said that it will take its own steps to increase the transparen­cy of political ads and that it generally supports legislativ­e efforts to do the same.

Google also increased its spending relative to last year, doling out $4.17 million on lobbying in the third quarter, up 9 percent. In addition to lobbying Congress and the White House on the regulation of online advertisin­g, Google also used its lobbying operation for issues such as the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, often called DACA, as well as President Donald Trump’s travel bans, antitrust law and tax-code legislatio­n.

Of any corporatio­n in or out of the tech industry, Google spent more than all but one company. AT&T topped everyone, at $4.43 million. The telecommun­ications company is still waiting for federal officials to review its $85 billion proposed acquisitio­n of Time Warner, which is listed on its lobbying disclosure­s. The two companies recently said they will extend the deadline to finalize the deal, with the hopes of obtaining a nod from the government.

Google’s uptick in lobbying comes as it faces the largest fine the European Union has ever levied against a company for abusing its dominant market position. This summer, the European Union’s antitrust chief hit Google with a $2.7 billion fine for illegally steering users toward its comparison shopping site. Google is appealing the decision.

Antitrust was also a lobbying priority for Amazon, which listed competitio­n and the purchase of Whole Foods on its third-quarter disclosure­s. While that acquisitio­n was approved without protests from antitrust officials, some in Washington and Silicon Valley have called for increased scrutiny of the Internet’s dominant platforms on the grounds that they may unfairly exploit their economic power.

Amazon, according to its disclosure­s, spent $3.4 million from July 1 to September 30, up 26 percent from what it spent during the same period last year. That’s more than Amazon has ever spent in a single quarter. Amazon lobbied on issues including DACA, autonomous vehicles and corporate taxes.

Amazon founder and Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.

Uber and Apple also increased their spending in the third quarter year over year. Apple spent $1.86 million in the third quarter, up 73 percent. The iPhone maker lobbied on issues including DACA, corporate taxes and climate change. Uber dedicated $510,000 to federal lobbying, an increase of 50 percent. Autonomous driving and foreign regulation of data management were among the issues the ride-hailing company prioritize­d.

While many of tech’s biggest names pumped up their lobbying spending, Twitter and Microsoft actually decreased their spending compared to the third quarter last year.

Facebook, Apple and Twitter declined to comment. Google, Uber, Microsoft and Amazon did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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