New York Post

APP’S VIRAL SPIRAL

TikTok lobbyist blamed for feeble ban backlash

- By THOMAS BARRABI

TikTok’s aggressive push to stop Congress from forcing a sale or ban of the China-owned app was an epic disaster — and insiders blame the company’s slick, seasoned Washington, DC, lobbyist who they claim miscalcula­ted with outdated, tonedeaf tactics.

As the bipartisan bill moved toward passage late last month in a UkraineIsr­ael aid package, TikTok launched a headline-grabbing campaign to mobilize 170 million American users through push notificati­ons on the app, with CEO Shou Chew urging users to “make your voices heard.”

But the controvers­ial blitz — echoing tactics used by Uber and Airbnb nearly a decade earlier in fierce battles in New York City — sparked what skeptics dismissed as little more than crank calls. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) called the cops after he got a voicemail threatenin­g, “I’ll find you and shoot you and cut you into pieces” if he voted for the TikTok bill.

“These phone calls were from kids and teenagers who couldn’t even vote and they were either threatenin­g suicide or they were threatenin­g to murder the member of Congress,” said Michael Sobolik, senior fellow at American Foreign Policy Council.

Beltway insiders traced the phone offensive to TikTok’s head of public policy, Michael Beckerman — a notorious tech-industry operative and exGOP Hill staffer who posed for Modern Luxury’s “Men of Style” issue wearing $5,000 shoes in 2014.

The former head of the now-defunct trade group Internet Associatio­n, Beckerman joined TikTok in January 2020 and played a key role in shaping its government strategy as calls to ban the app gained steam — even testifying on behalf of the company at a Senate hearing in 2021.

While Beckerman is seen as a charming communicat­or who can command a room, multiple sources said his forceful personalit­y and flashy wardrobe can rub people the wrong way in DC.

“When you walk into a congressio­nal office wearing shoes that are five times more expensive than the entire wardrobe of the staffer you’re meeting, you’re not really doing your job or being effective in your communicat­ion,” said Nathan Leamer, a former FCC policy adviser and CEO of Fixed Gear Strategies.

TikTok and its Beijing-based parent, ByteDance, spent $7 million on lobbying and ads opposing a ban and tapped Beltway heavyweigh­ts such ex-Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway to aid its effort. TikTok has argued the law is unconstitu­tional and filed a federal lawsuit to block it.

TikTok’s major mistake, said DC insiders who spoke to The Post, was ignoring the elephant in the room: concerns that the Chinese Communist Party could leverage US user data for nefarious purposes and even sway public opinion, especially ahead of the 2024 presidenti­al election.

Well-worn talking point

“TikTok’s DC advocacy never addressed those concerns head-on,” said Republican FCC Commission­er Brendan Carr, a vocal TikTok critic. “What they continued to do was to provide nonrespons­ive answers, to obfuscate and to focus on how popular they believed the app was.”

TikTok had warned that a crackdown would wreak havoc on US small businesses who rely on the app — a well-worn talking point from Big Tech’s playbook that echoed tactics long used by Google and Meta. TikTok even commission­ed a study by Oxford Economics that found the app contribute­d more than $24 billion to the US economy in 2023.

“That was definitely Michael,” a former Beckerman colleague said.

A TikTok rep said the company makes “no apologies for explaining the enormous benefit that TikTok brings to the American economy and thousands of small businesses.”

‘Strong relationsh­ips’

The source close to TikTok also laughed off claims that Beckerman’s wardrobe had somehow rankled Hill staffers as “made up” and said his choice in footwear is actually “pretty understate­d.” He purportedl­y buys from a Utah-based firm called Taft, which sells shoes for $400 or less.

“Michael enjoys strong relationsh­ips on Capitol Hill and is widely respected as a thoughtful and effective advocate not only for our company, but also our community of users,” a TikTok spokespers­on said.

Meanwhile, in a March 11 letter reviewed by The Post, bill sponsor Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) blasted TikTok for “using your platform to deceive the American people” through the push notificati­ons. He added, “Next week, TikTok could be spreading false informatio­n about a war.”

A source close to TikTok insisted it was “completely false” to suggest the push notificati­ons backfired.

“The Senate never took the bill up,” the source said. “The only way they could get this done was by doing closed-door hearings. The hearings were not open, the markup was not open, everything was closed-door. At the end of the day, they could only get the bill done by hiding it in the massive Israel-Ukraine aid package.”

Some sources said Beckerman was dealt a nearly impossible hand, given the extent of bipartisan support for a TikTok ban and major shifts in the geopolitic­al relationsh­ip between the US and China since 2020.

“He must have been under a phenomenal amount of pressure,” said Chris Castle, a lawyer focused on music industry policy. “He did a pretty good job for a long time of fending off the government.”

Beckerman’s strategy probably would have worked for TikTok “five or seven years ago,” added Sobolik.

“It is now a politicall­y bad position to be defending the Chinese Communist Party’s control over anything in the United States,” he said. “Your tactics will only take you so far if you have a politicall­y toxic position.”

 ?? ?? Commie, maybe?
Insiders say TikTok lobbyist Michael Beckerman (left) tried to get Congress to not ban the app. But the campaign to, as CEO Shou Chew (below) told users, “make your voices heard,” was doomed due to fears of Chinese Communist Party involvemen­t.
Commie, maybe? Insiders say TikTok lobbyist Michael Beckerman (left) tried to get Congress to not ban the app. But the campaign to, as CEO Shou Chew (below) told users, “make your voices heard,” was doomed due to fears of Chinese Communist Party involvemen­t.

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