Montana Lawmakers Approve Statewide Ban on TikTok
Supporters
of the bill expect legal challenges if the governor signs the legislation
Montana
lawmakers on Friday approved a first-of-its-kind bill to ban TikTok across the state, setting the stage for future court
battles that could determine the fate of the popular, Chinese-owned
social-media app in the U.S.
The Montana House voted 54-43 to send the bill to
Gov. Greg Gianforte’s desk. The governor’s office declined to say whether he
would sign the bill but noted Mr. Gianforte had previously banned TikTok on government-issued devices and urged the state
university system to do the same.
The bill
said the ban would go into effect on Jan. 1, 2024. It would prohibit TikTok, owned by Beijing-based ByteDance
Ltd., from operating within the state, and would also bar app stores from
offering TikTok within the state. It would fine any
entity violating this law $10,000 per violation. It is unclear how some
elements of the legislation would be enforced.
Once the
governor receives the bill, he has 10 days to act on it before it automatically
becomes law.
The bill’s authors
ahead of the vote said they expect legal challenges that could ultimately reach
the U.S. Supreme Court should Mr. Gianforte sign the legislation.
Critics
including the American Civil Liberties Union said the bill amounts to
censorship and violates free-speech rights protected under the First Amendment.
A TikTok spokesperson said the company will “continue to
fight for TikTok users and creators in Montana whose
livelihoods and First Amendment rights are threatened by this egregious
government overreach.”
App
store-providers Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google didn’t immediately
respond to a request for comment.
Lawmakers
who opposed the bill say it is unclear what would happen if TikTok
users employed a workaround to download the app, such as a virtual private
network that makes it seem their devices are logging in from outside Montana.
Friday’s
vote in Helena was the latest setback to TikTok’s campaign
to remain operating in the U.S.
Helena
has become the latest demonstration of the bipartisan and nationwide momentum
to ban TikTok over national-security concerns. In
Washington last month, Democrats and Republicans at a congressional hearing
grilled TikTok’s chief executive over his company’s
ties to China. A Pew Research Center survey a week
later found that 50% of Americans supported a TikTok
ban, with 22% opposed and 28% indicating they were unsure.
The
Biden administration recently asked TikTok to
separate itself from its parent company ByteDance or
to face a possible ban, the Journal reported last month. Some Congress members
and Biden administration officials said they’re concerned that the Chinese
government could force TikTok to spy on its 150
million U.S. users or distribute propaganda.
TikTok said it
would refuse to comply with such a request—and that it has proposed a $1.5
billion plan to the Biden administration that would silo its U.S. operations
from China’s influence.
The
debate over banning TikTok in Helena mirrored the
conversation in Washington. Republican state Sen. Shelley Vance said she
introduced the bill—which was written with the help of Montana Attorney General
Austin Knudsen, also a Republican—over the national-security concerns. The
Montana Senate approved it last month, 30-20, with bipartisan support.
The
bill’s detractors also came from both parties. Just as liberal Democratic Rep.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and libertarian-leaning GOP Sen. Rand Paul
of Kentucky have raised concerns about congressional efforts to ban TikTok nationwide, like-minded Montana lawmakers from both
parties did the same in Helena.