Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Amazon 3Q lobbying tab $3.63M

Spending up as it seeks $10B Pentagon cloud-computing deal

- BEN BRODY BLOOMBERG NEWS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Naomi Nix and Spencer Soper of Bloomberg News.

Amazon.com set its second consecutiv­e quarterly record on spending to influence U.S. policymake­rs in the third quarter as it competed for a $10 billion cloud-computing contract with the Pentagon.

Lobbying expenditur­es by other technology giants also increased as executives from Alphabet’s Google, Facebook and Twitter went to Washington to address allegation­s of political bias on their platforms from President Donald Trump and fellow Republican­s, and braced for the threat of more antitrust scrutiny.

Amazon, which has boosted its federal lobbying far faster than rivals in recent years, spent $3.63 million on its efforts during the period, up from its previous quarterly record — set in the second quarter of this year — of $3.47 million, according to disclosure­s filed with Congress.

In addition to the Defense Department cloud contract, for which the company is thought to be the front-runner, Amazon faced the tax implicatio­ns of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June that opened the door for state and local government­s to pursue sales taxes on more online transactio­ns.

The online retail giant already takes in sales taxes in all states that charge them on transactio­ns involving its own inventory, but about half of the items sold on Amazon come from millions of independen­t merchants who post inventory on the Web store, and many of those sales have not been taxed.

Amazon disclosed lobbying on cloud computing in the context of homeland security as well as issues related to taxation of online sales, among other priorities. The company’s spending doesn’t represent an absolute record, as it reported higher expenditur­es in some periods when disclosure­s occurred twice yearly and weren’t broken out by quarter. Quarterly disclosure­s began in 2008.

In addition to Amazon’s spending, the Internet Associatio­n spent a group record of $800,000, up from $660,000 in the second quarter, which had been its previous top amount. The trade group counts Google, Facebook and Twitter as members.

Google spent $5.46 million during the period, up more than 30 percent from the $4.17 million in the same period last year. In the three quarters before the current period, the search giant was the highestspe­nding single company, though some trade associatio­ns and other groups have spent more. So far this year, Google has spent almost 20 percent more than it had through the third quarter of 2017.

Facebook spent $2.82 million during the quarter, down slightly from $2.85 million a year earlier, while Twitter spent $310,000, a significan­t increase from the $120,000 it spent a year ago.

In September, Twitter Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey and Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg testified before Congress. They addressed online foreign influence campaigns in U.S. elections and attempted to swat down claims that their platforms silence conservati­ve voices and news.

In August, Trump had also warned Google, Facebook and Twitter that they “better be careful” as he repeated unsubstant­iated allegation­s that the companies favor liberal views. The companies have said they do not silence people for their opinions, though they have acknowledg­ed mistaken enforcemen­t actions that affected conservati­ves.

Facebook lobbied on “content and platform transparen­cy efforts” and “freedom of expression on the Internet,” among a variety of other issues. Twitter lobbied on “issues related to content moderation practices” and “misinforma­tion,” along with other topics, according to the filings.

Tech companies have also been facing increased scrutiny over their size and market power, including considerat­ion by the White House of an executive order that would instruct federal antitrust and law enforcemen­t agencies to open inquiries into the practices of Google and social media companies. Amazon has also been the subject of criticisms of its competitiv­e position. The companies reject the claims.

The Internet Associatio­n trade group was also one of several companies and business groups that released principles for a federal privacy law during the period. Congress is looking to legislate in the area.

The Informatio­n Technology Industry Council, another tech trade group that issued its own privacy principles Monday, spent $450,000 during the quarter.

No. 1 software maker Microsoft Corp. spent $2.24 million, Oracle Corp. spent $1.44 million, and Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp. spent $900,000. All three have also bid for the Defense Department’s cloud contract.

Among telecommun­ications providers, AT&T Inc. spent $3.85 million, Comcast Corp. spent $3.43 million, Charter Communicat­ions Inc. spent $2.27 million and Verizon Communicat­ions Inc. spent just over $2.33 million.

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