National Post

PM declines to comment on future of Tiktok in U.S.

- Mickey Djuric

OAKVILLE, ONT. • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is refusing to comment on the future of Tiktok in the United States, at a time when his own party is leaning on the app and its influencer­s to deliver the Liberals’ political message to Canadians.

The U.S. Senate passed a bill Tuesday that would force Tiktok’s parent company, Beijing-based Bytedance, to sell its share of the social-media app within a year or face a ban in the platform’s largest market.

The proposed ban was slipped into a $95-billion aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, and was signed into law on Wednesday by U.S. President Joe Biden.

Tiktok has since promised to challenge the “unconstitu­tional law” in court.

Trudeau said he is not going to comment on what other government’s are doing, but that his own will continue to look out for Canadians’ security.

“We know that the security, the privacy and the data protection of Canadians needs to be a first priority for us,” Trudeau said on Wednesday.

“We’ve already taken significan­t measures on that and we will continue to do that. But we will act in ways that are right for Canadians.”

The federal Liberals ordered a national security review of Tiktok last September, and the app is banned on federal government devices.

However, it is still used by the federal Liberal and New Democratic parties, which rely on it to reach young Canadians who increasing­ly flock to the app to discover news, informatio­n and popular culture.

And over the past year, the federal government has invited influencer­s who have a following on Tiktok to events and private briefings, including for housing announceme­nts and the recent federal budget.

“Canadians are consuming digital content more and more. As the media landscape grows, so does our approach to how we communicat­e,” Mohammad Hussain, a spokesman for Trudeau, said last week.

Tiktok is the fasting-growing social-media app in Canada, a report last year from Toronto Metropolit­an University shows, but it is also considered the least trusted.

For years, Western government­s have expressed concerns that the popular platform could put sensitive data in the hands of China’s government or be used as a misinforma­tion tool.

Chinese law says the government in Beijing can order companies to help it gather intelligen­ce.

The Prime Minister’s Office would not say whether it supports Bytedance selling its share of Tiktok.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, who had a large following on the app, was just one federal politician affected by the government­wide ban on devices imposed last year.

He said officials told him about concerns around the app tracking him and his movement, noting that members of Parliament can be easily identified.

But the NDP has since logged back onto the app, he said, as his team considers ways to also get the leader himself back on Tiktok “in a safe way.”

“Our concern around Tiktok is to make sure users in Canada are safe, that their data and their privacy is protected,” Singh said Wednesday in Edmonton.

The Conservati­ves, too, complied with the directive, but they also “went a step further to suspend use of the app altogether,” said Sebastian Skamski, a spokesman for Tory Leader Pierre Poilievre.

“Conservati­ves take seriously all threats to privacy and security from foreign authoritar­ian regimes and will always defend the individual privacy rights of Canadians,” he said.

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The U.S. Senate passed a bill Tuesday that would force Tiktok’s parent company, Bytedance, to sell its share of the social-media app within a year or face a ban.
STEFANI REYNOLDS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES The U.S. Senate passed a bill Tuesday that would force Tiktok’s parent company, Bytedance, to sell its share of the social-media app within a year or face a ban.

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