U.S. Republicans worry China might use TikTok to meddle in election
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[July 29, 2020]
By Alexandra Alper
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of top
Republican U.S. Senators on Tuesday ramped up pressure on TikTok, asking
the Trump administration to assess the threat that the popular
Chinese-owned video sharing app might meddle in U.S. elections.
In a letter dated Tuesday, Marco Rubio, Tom Cotton and other lawmakers
cited alleged censorship by TikTok of sensitive content, including a
video critical of China's treatment of its Uighur minority, as well as
alleged attempts by Beijing to manipulate political discussions on
social media apps.
"We are greatly concerned that the (Chinese Communist Party) could use
its control over TikTok to distort or manipulate (political)
conversations to sow discord among Americans and to achieve its
preferred political outcomes," the lawmakers wrote in a letter to the
Office of Director of National Intelligence (ODHI), the acting secretary
of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
A spokesperson for the company said that TikTok, though not a "go-to"
for political news, was "proactively investing to safeguard our app" and
taking cues from the experience of peers during the last election.
"TikTok already has a strict policy against disinformation, and we don't
accept political ads," the person said, adding that content and
moderation policies are led by a California-based team and aren't
"influenced by any foreign government".
The FBI and DHS did not respond to requests for comment while an ODNI
official confirmed receipt of the letter and said "we will respond
accordingly."
Chinese foreign spokesman Wang Wenbin, speaking at a daily news
conference in Beijing on Wednesday, said that China has no interest in
the U.S. election and urged certain people in the United States to stop
"suppressing" Chinese companies.
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Tik Tok logo is displayed on the smartphone while standing on the
U.S. flag in this illustration picture taken, November 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
The U.S. lawmakers, joined by Republicans Ted Cruz, Joni Ernst Thom
Tilis, Kevin Cramer and Rick Scott, asked the officials to say
whether Beijing could amplify certain political views and conduct
influence operations through the popular app, which is owned by
Beijing ByteDance Technology Co.
"If evidence emerges of CCP electoral interference via TikTok, would
ByteDance be eligible for sanctions" under an executive order on
foreign electoral influence, the lawmakers asked.
TikTok is in the crosshairs of the Trump administration as
U.S.-China ties have soured over the pandemic and Beijing’s move to
curb freedoms in Hong Kong. This month, White House Chief of Staff
Mark Meadows said action was imminent to address national security
risks posed by TikTok.
Trump's poll numbers have been sagging as he prepares to face
Democrat Joe Biden in the November election. In 2019, special
prosecutor Robert Mueller's report found extensive cases of Russian
meddling that benefited the Trump campaign in the 2016 election.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper; Additional reporting by Gabriel
Crossley in Beijing; Editing by David Gregorio and Gareth Jones)
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