China’s foreign ministry has described a new US law that proposes forced divestment of TikTok in the United States as an “act of bullying.”

Speaking at a news conference in Beijing before US lawmakers voted on the bill, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said: “Even though the US has not found evidence on how TikTok endangers its national security, it has never stopped going after TikTok.”

Wang said the US resorts “to acts of bullying” when it fails to succeed in fair competition and that disrupted markets, undermined investor confidence and the global economic order. “This will eventually backfire on the US itself,” he said.

 

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The bill received overwhelming bipartisan support when it was put to a vote in the US House of Representatives on Wednesday, passing by 352 to 65.

The proposed law, which now goes to the Senate, would give TikTok’s Chinese owner ByteDance about six months to divest the US assets of the short-video app used by about 170 million Americans, or face a ban.

But the bill faces a more uncertain path in the Upper House, where some senators favour a different approach to regulating foreign-owned apps that could pose security concerns. Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has not indicated how he plans to proceed.

TikTok’s fate has become a major issue in Washington. Democratic and Republican lawmakers said their offices had received large volumes of calls from teenaged TikTok users who oppose the legislation, with the volume of complaints at times exceeding the number of calls seeking a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

The measure is the latest in a series of moves in Washington to respond to US national security concerns about China, from connected vehicles to advanced artificial-intelligence chips to cranes at US ports.

“This is a critical national security issue. The Senate must take this up and pass it,” No-2 House Republican Steve Scalise said on social media platform X.

Shortly after passage, a bipartisan pair of senators, Democrat Mark Warner and Republican Marco Rubio, issued a joint statement saying they were encouraged by the bipartisan support for the bill and that they “look forward to working together to get this bill passed through the Senate and signed into law.”

The vote comes just over a week since the bill was proposed following one public hearing with little debate, and after action in Congress had stalled for more than a year. Last month, President Joe Biden’s re-election campaign joined TikTok, raising hopes among TikTok officials that legislation was unlikely this year.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee last week voted 50-0 in favor of the bill, setting it up for a vote before the full House.

 

White House: Goal is new owner, not a ban

TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew will visit Capitol Hill on Wednesday on a previously scheduled trip to talk to senators, a source briefed on the matter said.

“This legislation has a predetermined outcome: a total ban of TikTok in the United States,” the company said before the vote. “The government is attempting to strip 170 million Americans of their Constitutional right to free expression,” it added.

Biden said last week that he would sign the bill.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Tuesday the goal was ending Chinese ownership, not banning TikTok.

“Do we want TikTok, as a platform, to be owned by an American company or owned by China? Do we want the data from TikTok – children’s data, adults’ data – to be going, to be staying here in America or going to China?” he said.

It is unclear whether China would approve any sale or if TikTok’s US assets could be divested in six months.

If ByteDance failed to do so, app stores operated by Apple, Alphabet’s Google and others could not legally offer TikTok or provide web hosting services to ByteDance-controlled applications.

In 2020, then-President Donald Trump sought to ban TikTok and Chinese-owned WeChat but was blocked by the courts. In recent days he had raised concerns about a ban. It remains unclear if Tencent’s WeChat or other high-profile Chinese-owned apps could face a ban under the legislation.

Any forced TikTok divestment from the US would almost certainly face legal challenges, which the company would need to file within 165 days of the bill being signed by the President. In November, a US judge blocked a Montana state ban on TikTok use after the company sued.

 

 

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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TikTok Ban Would Help ‘Enemy of the People’ Facebook: Trump

 

‘If They Pass It, I’ll Sign It’: Biden Backs Bill to Ban TikTok

 

TikTok, US Lawmakers in War of Words as Bill to Ban App Gets Fuel

 

Suspicion And Mistrust Continuing to Shadow TikTok

 

TikTok Hit With $370m EU Fine Over Children’s Data Breaches

 

TikTok to Spend Billions in Southeast Asia, Focus on E-Commerce

 

US and Canada Order TikTok Cut From All Government Phones

 

China’s TikTok Sues Montana Over Statewide Ban

 

TikTok CEO to Tell US Lawmakers: ‘We’ve Never Shared Data’

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.


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