U.S.
Pushes for TikTok Sale to Resolve National Security
Concerns
The
demand hardens the White House’s stance toward the popular video app, which is
owned by the Chinese internet company ByteDance.
The Biden administration
wants TikTok’s Chinese ownership to sell the app or
face a possible ban, TikTok said on Wednesday, as the
White House hardens its stance toward resolving national security concerns
about the popular video service.
The new demand to sell the
app was delivered to TikTok in recent weeks, two
people with knowledge of the matter said. TikTok is
owned by the Chinese internet company ByteDance.
The move is a significant
shift in the Biden administration’s position toward TikTok,
which has been under scrutiny over fears that Beijing could request Americans’
data from the app. The White House had been trying to negotiate
an agreement with TikTok that
would apply new safeguards to its data and eliminate a need for ByteDance to sell its shares in the app.
But the demand for a sale —
coupled with the White House’s support for legislation that would allow it to
ban TikTok in the United States — hardens the
administration’s approach. It harks back to the position of former President
Donald J. Trump, who threatened to ban TikTok unless it was sold to an American
company.
TikTok
said it was weighing its options and was disappointed by the decision. The
company said its security proposal, which involves storing Americans’ data in
the United States, offered the best protection for users.
“If protecting national
security is the objective, divestment doesn’t solve the problem: A change in
ownership would not impose any new restrictions on data flows or access,”
Maureen Shanahan, a spokeswoman for TikTok, said in a
statement.
TikTok’s
chief executive, Shou Zi Chew, is
scheduled to testify before the House Energy and Commerce Committee next week.
He is expected to face questions about the app’s ties to China, as well as
concerns that it delivers harmful content to young people.
A White House spokeswoman
declined to comment, as did a spokeswoman for the Treasury Department, which
has led the negotiations with TikTok. The Justice
Department also declined to comment. The demand for a sale was
reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.
TikTok,
with 100 million U.S. users, is at the center of a battle between the
Biden administration and the Chinese government
over tech and economic leadership, as well as national security. President
Biden has waged a broad campaign against China with enormous funding programs
to increase domestic production of semiconductors, electric vehicles and
lithium batteries. The administration has also banned Chinese telecommunications
equipment and restricted U.S. exports of chip-manufacturing equipment to China.
The fight over TikTok began in 2020 when Mr. Trump said he would ban the
app unless ByteDance sold its stake to an American
company, a move recommended by a group of federal agencies known as the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS.
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The Trump administration
eventually appeared to reach a deal for
ByteDance to sell part of TikTok
to Oracle, the U.S. cloud computing company, and Walmart. But the potential
transaction never came to fruition.
CFIUS staff and TikTok continued to negotiate a deal that would allow the
app to operate in America. TikTok submitted a major
draft of an agreement — which TikTok has called
Project Texas — in August. Under the proposal, the company said it would store
data belonging to U.S. users on server computers run by Oracle inside the
United States.
TikTok
officials have not heard back from CFIUS officials since they submitted their
proposal, the company said.
In that vacuum, concerns
about the app have intensified. States, schools and Congress have enacted bans
on TikTok. Last year, a company investigation
found that Chinese-based employees of ByteDance had
access to the data of U.S. TikTok users, including
reporters.
Brendan Carr,
a Republican on the Federal Communications Commission, said the
administration’s new demand was a “good sign” that the White House was taking a
harder line.
“There is bipartisan consensus
that we can’t compromise on U.S. national security when it comes to TikTok, and so I hope the CFIUS review now quickly
concludes in a manner that safeguards U.S. interests,” Mr. Carr
said.
The White House last week
backed a bipartisan Senate bill that would give it more power to deal
with TikTok, including by banning the
app. If it passed, the legislation would give the administration more leverage
in its negotiations with the app and potentially allow it to force a sale.
Any effort to ban the app or
force its sale could face a legal challenge. Federal courts ultimately ruled
against Mr. Trump’s attempt to block the app from appearing in Apple’s and
Google’s app stores. And the American Civil Liberties Union recently condemned
legislation to ban the app, saying it raises concerns under the First
Amendment.