The Mercury News

Facebook, Amazon set lobbying spending records

Facebook, Amazon set records amid scrutiny

- By Mark Niquette and Ben Brody Bloomberg News

Facebook and Amazon.com set records for lobbying in the second quarter as Washington ramped up scrutiny of big technology companies, while Google’s spending dipped as it continued to reshuffle its influence operations.

The world’s largest social media site spent more than $4.1 million on lobbying, the most among big internet platforms, an increase from its previous high in the same period a year earlier.

Facebook disclosed lobbying around blockchain, the technology that underlies cryptocurr­encies.

The company has been trying to win support for its Libra cryptocurr­ency, which drew skepticism from President Donald Trump, congressio­nal Democrats and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and took a beating from lawmakers in both houses of Congress during two days of hearings last week.

The company was also in the final stages of settling an investigat­ion by the Federal Trade Commission into privacy violations in the Cambridge Analytica scandal. The FTC has voted to fine the company $5 billion and is expected to announce the final details of the settlement within days.

Amazon spent more than $4 million on lobbying, topping a quarterly record in the first three months of the year, according to disclosure­s filed with Congress before Monday’s midnight deadline. Amazon, which runs a broad lobbying operation on

a diverse range of issues, is closing in on a $10 billion cloud services contract that the Pentagon is poised to award to a single bidder next month.

Last week, Trump criticized Amazon as the perceived front-runner for the contract, saying companies such as Oracle Corp. and Microsoft Corp. had complained that the process was unfair. Oracle has led a sustained lobbying campaign against the department’s plans to award the project, known as Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastruc­ture, or JEDI, to a single bidder.

In June, Amazon hired Jeff Miller, who bundled $1 million for Trump’s 2016 campaign, to lobby for its cloud computing division on issues related to “cyber

security and technology services,” the filings show.

On July 18, Trump said he would look “very seriously” at the bid.

Oracle spent almost $1.7 million during the quarter, when it said it lobbied on issues including cloud and government IT procuremen­t. It also lobbied the White House and the office of Vice President Mike Pence, the disclosure­s show. Microsoft Corp., which is the last remaining cloud provider that’s vying with Amazon for the contract, spent $2.7 million in the quarter, while Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp., which was eliminated as a competitor along with Oracle in April, spent $1.6 million, including lobbying on JEDI, the filings show.

The big internet companies are coming under growing antitrust pressure as the U.S. moves toward investigat­ing whether their

conduct squelches competitio­n. The Justice Department and the FTC, which share antitrust jurisdicti­on, have carved up responsibi­lity for oversight, with the FTC taking responsibi­lity for Facebook and Amazon and the department’s antitrust division claiming Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Apple Inc.

Facebook and Amazon also underwent a series of hearings by a House committee conducting a broad antitrust investigat­ion of technology companies,

drawing ire from lawmakers during the latest hearing earlier this month.

Google ended its relationsh­ips with at least 17 lobbyists at six outside lobbying firms as global policy chief, Karan Bhatia, reorganize­s the search engine’s approach. Google’s secondquar­ter spending dipped to $3.1 million, a decrease of about half what it spent in the same period a year earlier, the filings showed.

Among the top-level exits were Robert Raben of the Raben Group, who served as assistant attorney general of the Justice Department under former President Bill Clinton. It also ended its relationsh­ip with Tom Ingram, a former staff director of the Senate Republican Conference. Susan Molinari, the company’s longtime Washington director and a former Republican member of Congress, moved to an advisory position at the

end of 2018.

Apple, which is grappling with stepped-up antitrust scrutiny as well as concerns about trade, disclosed spending of $1.8 million in the second quarter, up slightly from $1.7 million a year earlier.

Trump’s threats to impose additional tariffs on imports from China and Mexico during the quarter, as well as a push to ratify a replacemen­t for the North American Free Trade Agreement, contribute­d to an increase in trade lobbying by some associatio­ns.

The Consumer Technology Associatio­n, whose members include Apple, Amazon and Facebook, reported spending almost $1.8 million during the second quarter — up from almost $1.5 million a year earlier and from $1.4 million in the first quarter — in part because of the tariff threats, spokeswoma­n Bronwyn Flores said.

 ?? ALASTAIR PIKE/AFP — GETTY IMAGES ?? Facebook spent $4.1 M on lobbying, which is the most among internet companies.
ALASTAIR PIKE/AFP — GETTY IMAGES Facebook spent $4.1 M on lobbying, which is the most among internet companies.

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