US House passes bill to ban TikTok
Passed by the House by 352 to 65 votes, the bill now heads to the US Senate for it to be sent to the White House for the President to sign it into law
PTI
Washington, 13 March
The US House of Representatives on
Wednesday passed a bill to ban Chinese social media app Tiktok, which is very
popular among kids, in the United States.
India was the first country to ban
TikTok in 2020 after it became public knowledge that the popular Chinese social
media platform was being used for gathering personal data and spying on others.
Passed by the House by 352 to 65
votes, the bill now heads to the US Senate for it to be sent to the White House
for the President to sign it into law. While 197 Republican lawmakers voted for
the measure and 15 against, on the Democratic side, 155 voted for the bill and
50 against.
The bill, “Protecting Americans
From Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act”, was co-authored by Indian
American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, a Democrat, and Congressman Mike
Gallaghe from the Republican party. “This bill is not a ban and it is not about
TikTok. It is about ByteDance...a 100 per cent owner of TikTok. ByteDance is
controlled by the Chinese Communist Party. In fact the editor-in-chief of
ByteDance is the secretary of the Chinese Communist Party cell embedded at the
very highest ranks of the company,” Krishnamoorthi said.
He said the bill ensures that
ByteDance divests itself of the vast majority of the ownership at TikTok. “Our
intention is for TikTok to continue to operate but not under the control of the
CCP,” Krishnamoorthi said.
Former vice president Mike Pence
said the passage of this legislation demonstrates that appeasement to Communist
China is over, allowing TikTok to continue operating in the United States while
under CCP control is simply unacceptable. "The Senate must take up this
legislation as soon as possible and send it to President Biden’s desk. AAF will
never falter in our commitment to confronting China at home and abroad, the
American government must not falter now,” he demanded.
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
said the overwhelming and bipartisan passage of the bill is a strong statement
of the Congress’s commitment to the security of the country and privacy of the
data. “Let me be clear: this legislation is not a ban on TikTok. I join my
colleagues in recognising the platform’s entertainment, educational and
entrepreneurial value, especially among younger people. Instead, this
legislation would strengthen TikTok: keeping Americans’ data and control of the
algorithm out of the hands of a foreign adversary. "In doing so, we
protect against surveillance and influence operations that are hallmarks of the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP),” she said.
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