East Bay Times

Google's lobbying in California up in '23

Effort comes to stop bill requiring platforms to pay news publishers

- By Queenie Wong

The 30-second video ad struck an ominous tone, urging California­ns to tell their lawmakers to vote against legislatio­n that would force Google, Facebook and other large platforms to pay news publishers.

“It's a dangerous precedent that will drive up costs for small businesses and make it easier for politician­s to raise taxes in the future,” the narrator says in the ad, which ran in June. “With inflation running high, we can't afford another Sacramento tax increase.”

The ad stated that it was “paid for” by the California Taxpayers Associatio­n, a nonprofit advocacy group, but it really was bankrolled by Google.

Between April and June, the search giant paid the associatio­n $1.2 million for advertisin­g, filings to the California secretary of state show. The associatio­n confirmed that Google funded the ad campaign against the bill.

Tech companies strongly opposed Assembly Bill 886, known as the California Journalism Preservati­on Act.

The money appears to have been well spent. Lawmakers put the legislatio­n on hold until 2024.

Google's payment to the taxpayers group made up most of the record $1.5 million the company spent lobbying California lawmakers and regulators from January to September. During the same period last year, Google spent $187,434. The company spends an average of about $257,000 per year lobbying in California, according to a review of such expenditur­es from 2005 to 2022.

The massive surge reflects the growing efforts by tech companies to influence California lawmakers as they debate how to protect young people and jour

nalists and other workers from the threats posed by social media sites, artificial intelligen­ce and other emerging technology.

Bob Shrum, a longtime Democratic consultant and director of the Center for the Political Future at the University of Southern California, said political ads are one way companies try to sway lawmakers, but the strategy is not always effective.

Shrum, who listened to the California Taxpayers Assn. ad, said viewers might walk away with the impression that the price of their internet service will go up.

“They skirt the line of being factual,” he said. “At the same time, the ad is anything but a rounded, accurate portrait of what the controvers­y is all about.”

Google's spending on lobbying in California outpaced that of Facebook parent company Meta, Amazon, Apple, and other multibilli­on-dollar companies, data from the California secretary of State show. The search giant's lobbying spending lagged behind ATT, Waymo (Google's selfdrivin­g car unit) and McDonald's, as well as major energy companies like Chevron.

Google's lobbying efforts went beyond advertisin­g. On June 28, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and two of his top staff members met with Google leaders at the company's San Francisco office, according to filings to the secretary of State's office.

A Google representa­tive said the meeting was about the overall legislativ­e landscape; Newsom's office said it was related to an executive order about artificial intelligen­ce that he went on to sign in September.

State Sen. Ben Allen (DSanta Monica) also met with Google, the filings showed. Allen's office said the senator and a legislativ­e director who works on environmen­tal policy toured the tech giant's Mountain View campus in April to learn about sustainabi­lity and waste reduction.

“We regularly engage with lawmakers and regulators on a range of issues, including economic growth, small business support, cybersecur­ity and protecting online informatio­n, among other issues,” Bailey Tomson, a spokespers­on for Google, said in a statement.

The company lobbied on a variety of bills during the last legislativ­e session, including measures barring law enforcemen­t demands for Google location data, protecting child safety on social media and regulating artificial intelligen­ce.

One of the company's biggest priorities: fighting a bill that would require tech giants to negotiate payment to news organizati­ons for stories displayed on their platforms. The online platforms would pay a “journalism usage fee” to certain publishers.

Organizati­ons that support the bill said it would help preserve democracy by funding local news outlets, which are grappling with drastic cuts and layoffs as they compete with tech companies for advertisin­g dollars. Tech companies should pay publishers because they profit from their news content, helping to keep people engaged on their platforms, news advocacy groups such as the California News Publishers Assn. and News/Media Alliance say. (The Los Angeles Times is a member of both organizati­ons and supports the proposed legislatio­n.)

Meta spokespers­on Andy Stone said in May that the bill would mostly benefit large publishers. The legislatio­n “fails to recognize that publishers and broadcaste­rs put their content on our platform themselves and that substantia­l consolidat­ion in California's local news industry came over 15 years ago, well before Facebook was widely used,” Stone tweeted.

Meta threatened to remove news from its platforms Facebook and Instagram if the California bill becomes law, a move the social media giant used in other countries that passed similar legislatio­n. In 2021, Meta temporaril­y blocked news in Australia but reversed the decision after reaching a deal with the Australian government. In August, Meta blocked news in Canada.

Debate about AB 886 has continued since the legislativ­e session wrapped in September. On Dec. 5, the California Senate Judiciary Committee held a four-hour hearing about the importance of journalism in the digital age. Chris Argentieri, president and chief operating officer of the L.A. Times, and Matt Pearce, a Times reporter and chair of Media Guild of the West, testified in support of the legislatio­n.

At the hearing, Google Vice President of News Richard Gingras said the search engine helps drive traffic to digital publicatio­ns and noted that the company also supports journalism in other ways, such as the Google News Initiative, which provides funding, resources and training.

“A link tax as proven elsewhere would be counterpro­ductive, making it more difficult for users to find diverse sources of news, reducing the opportunit­y for news publishers to build new audiences and making it harder for Google to direct users to helpful content,” Gingras told lawmakers.

The insinuatio­n that payments to news organizati­ons in California would be a new tax has been a pivotal part of video ads against the Journalism Preservati­on Act. Political ads against AB 886, including the one aired by the California Taxpayers Assn., ran in June and July, when the bill faced a critical deadline in the Senate Judiciary Committee, data from Meta's ad library show.

Advocacy group News/ Media Alliance, which supports AB 886, pushed back against the ads' claim that lawmakers are trying to impose a tax on tech companies.

“They distort reality, and they do a good job of it, because Google is a massive company with endless resources to be able to spend on creating messaging that's false,” said Danielle Coffey, president and chief operating operator of the organizati­on.

The California News Publishers Assn. and News/Media Alliance spent $161,519 on lobbying in California from January to September — far less than tech companies spent.

David Kline, a spokespers­on for the California Taxpayers Assn., said ads are just one tool lobbyists use if legislatio­n is moving quickly and they need to get the word out to a lot of people. The associatio­n's ad against AB 886 has racked up 2.1 million views on Google-owned YouTube.

“It's a giant state, where advertisin­g is your only realistic option for doing that, and just by the nature of it, advertisin­g is expensive,” he said. The taxpayers group wasn't representi­ng only Google but also other members that had concerns about the bill, he added.

Google and Meta are members of the Computer Communicat­ions Industry Assn., which also ran ads against AB 886. From January to September, the trade group spent $1.3 million on lobbying, filings to the secretary of State's office show.

Matt Schruers, president of the associatio­n, said the majority of the spending was related to political advertisin­g.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Google has paid $1.2 million to the California Taxpayers Associatio­n for advertisem­ents against Assembly Bill 886.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN — GETTY IMAGES Google has paid $1.2 million to the California Taxpayers Associatio­n for advertisem­ents against Assembly Bill 886.

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