TikTok Divestment Push Advances With House Committee Approval
TikTok Divestment Push Advances With House Committee Approval · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- A top Republican lawmaker said he’d seek a House vote next week on a bill that would force TikTok’s Chinese parent to sell the app or face a ban in the US, injecting new momentum into a congressional push to curtail Beijing’s influence over the video-sharing service.

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The legislation, which was advanced by a key committee on Thursday, would block internet service providers and app stores such as those run by Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google from offering the platform unless TikTok’s Chinese parent ByteDance Ltd. sells it within six months.

After the Energy and Commerce Committee voted to approve the bill by a vote of 50-0, Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the number two Republican in the House said he would bring it up for a vote on the House floor. Scalise said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, that the measure would force TikTok to “sever their ties with the Chinese Communist Party.”

Previous legislative attempts to restrict the app nationwide have failed, and this one would still have to clear legislative obstacles in the House and Senate, where it doesn’t have a sponsor. But lawmakers say this latest effort has been months in the making, fueled partly by renewed security concerns that China is surveilling Americans.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement that he was “talking with my chairs and caucus about the legislation. I will listen to their views on the bill and determine the best path.”

TikTok mounted a last-minute effort to counter the bill, which was unveiled Tuesday, by urging its users to call congressional offices to protest the bill via a message that greeted them when they opened the app. Congressional offices were flooded with calls, drawing the ire of House China Committee Chairman Mike Gallagher.

Lawmakers said “their phones were ringing off the hook last night,” Gallagher, a Wisconsin Republican, told journalists outside the Capitol on Thursday. “The intimidation tactics, the disinformation has to stop,” he said later in a video message.

In the end the campaign was unsuccessful, at least in preventing lawmakers from taking the first step toward enacting the legislation.

Read More: TikTok Can Keep ‘Bad Lip-Sync,’ Lawmakers Seeking Sale Say