Toronto Star

TikTok parent spends record on lobbying as U.S. pressure rises

ByteDance denies accusation­s the video app harvests data for the Chinese government

- SHELLY BANJO AND BEN BRODY

The Chinese owner of the popular TikTTok video app spent a company record on federal lobbying in the second quarter as it fought allegation­s that it’s funnelling Americans’ data to Beijing, according to lobbying disclosure­s filed with U.S. Congress.

Beijing-based ByteDance Ltd. spent $500,000 (U.S.) in the three months ended June 30, up from its previous record of $300,000 in the first quarter, according to the company’s lobbying disclosure Monday.

TikTok is responding to an onslaught of pressure from U.S. politician­s over its Chinese roots — tension that has escalated in third quarter, including calls by President Donald Trump to consider banning the app entirely and proposed legislatio­n to disallow downloads on government-issued mobile devices.

TikTok also faces a national security investigat­ion into the 2017 purchase of Musical.ly, a lip-synching app it later merged with TikTok, as well as a parallel probe by the administra­tion, which could culminate within weeks, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows told reporters last week. The company has also attracted inquiries by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department over its data-col- lection practices, according to a consumer advocate who said he spoke to the enforcers about the company.

ByteDance, which was founded in China and is incorporat­ed in the Cayman Islands, has repeatedly denied accusation­s that TikTok harvests data for the t Chinese government and says it stores Americans’ data in the U.S. and Singapore, not in China.

More popular than ever with hundreds of millions of people stuck at home during the coronaviru­s pandemic, teens have used the app to organize efforts to disrupt Trump’s re-election campaign. TikTok also has become a political pawn in the fight between Washington and Beijing: Trump and Secretary of State Michael Pompeo have said a ban on TikTok could be one form of retaliatio­n over China’s handling of the coronaviru­s.

The TikTok app has been downloaded two billion times globally, including 165 million times in the U.S., according to data provider Sensor Tower. That makes TikTok even more politicall­y important as users weigh in on issues like race and the upcoming presidenti­al election.

ByteDance, which only began lobbying last year, said in the filing that it worked on “issues related to internet technology and learning-enabled content platforms” and lobbied Congress and the executive office of the president, which includes key White House offices focused on economics and security.

It also lobbied on privacy and content moderation, according to a disclosure from Monument Advocacy, one of the company’s outside firms.

TikTok has been building up its lobbying muscle as it attempts to distance itself from its Chinese ties and convince v fun- American loving consumer politician­s app. that Former it’s just Walt Disney Co. executive Kevin May- er became TikTok’s first American cchief executive officer in June and the company earlier this month discussed plans to create a new global TikTok headquarte­rs outside of China, in addition to potential changes to its management structure.

TikTok’s Washington lobbying blitz started last year with efforts to broker meetings between company executives and high-profile senators. Since tthen, it’s amassed a 35-person Wash- ington operation and hired longtime policy hands to make its case to American politician­s. It named Michael Beckerman, the former president of the internet Associatio­n trade group, to run its policy shop, and hired David Urban, a senior adviser to Trump during his 2016 presidenti­al campaign, as an outside lobbyist. Both are registered as working for ByteDance.

ByteDance has also hired former top staff to Republican and Democratic House leaders and has brought on four outside lobbying firms in the last year.

In one meeting last year with staffers for Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, TikTTok staff provided conflictin­g informa- tion, including about where data was stored and how TikTok creates its algorithms, a Rubio spokesman said. “Given establishe­d connection­s to China and the inability of the company to answer basic questions from staff about TikTok’s ties to China and how it treats Americans’ user data, our office declined to have the Senator personally meet with them,” the spokesman said. “There is a huge amount of misinforma­tion on TikTok out there,” the company said in a statement last week, pointing to its American executives and board seats. “TikTok U.S. user data

is stored in the y U.S. and Singapore, with strict controls on employee ac- cess,” TikTok said in that statement. “These are the facts.”

Since April, TikTok reached out to the offices of more than 50 key lawmakers to emphasize its independen­t American leadership, a person familiar with the company’s Washington oper- ation a told Bloomberg.

 ?? NARINDER NANU AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? TikTok has been building up its lobbying muscle as it attempts to convince American politician­s that it’s just a fun-loving consumer app.
NARINDER NANU AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES TikTok has been building up its lobbying muscle as it attempts to convince American politician­s that it’s just a fun-loving consumer app.

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