In a bid designed to forestall perceived information-security risks stemming from the social media app, the US Senate has passed bill to ban TikTok from all its government devices.
The vote by unanimous consent approved the No TikTok on Government Devices Act, a bill authored by Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley.The move marks lawmakersā latest step against the short-form video app that has become popular with over a billion users worldwide. US officials fear that TikTokās user data could end up in the hands of the Chinese government due to that countryās influence over TikTokās parent, ByteDance.
A companion bill was introduced in the House last year by Colorado Republican Rep. Ken Buck. It has yet to be approved by members of the House Oversight Committee.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday it isnāt yet clear whether the chamber will take up the TikTok bill in light of its Senate passage, saying lawmakers were consulting with White House officials on its language.
āOnce again, Sen. Hawley has moved forward with legislation to ban TikTok on government devices, a proposal which does nothing to advance U.S. national security interests,ā a spokesperson for TikTok said in a statement.
āWe hope that rather than continuing down that road, he will urge the Administration to move forward on an agreement that would actually address his concerns.ā
Prior to the legislative action, TikTok and the US government have been negotiating a deal that may allow the app to keep serving US users.
There have been years of closed-door talks between TikTok and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, as well as recent reports of delays in the negotiations.
Some lawmakers have expressed frustration with an apparent lack of progress in those talks. This includes Virginia Democratic Sen. Mark Warner, a vocal critic of TikTok, who said, following Wednesday’s Note, āMy patience is running out.ā
On Tuesday, US lawmakers led by Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio introduced a bill to ban TikTok in the United States more generally, along with other apps based in, or under the āsubstantial influenceā of countries that are considered foreign adversaries, including China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba and Venezuela.
In introducing the bill, Rubio also indicated some frustration, saying that the federal government āhas yet to take a single meaningful actionā on the matter.
But several senators, including Warner and Hawley, have stopped short of endorsing Rubioās proposal. On Thursday, Hawley said he would be āfineā if the US government and TikTok reached a deal to safeguard US usersā data.
āBut if they donāt do that ⦠then I think weāre going to have to look at more stringent measures,ā Hawley said.
In the past two weeks, at least seven states have said they will bar public employees from using the app on government devices, including Alabama, Maryland, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and Texas.
Meanwhile, Nebraska, banned TikTok from state devices in 2020.
Some US government agencies have independently taken steps to limit TikTok usage among their employees. Already, the US military, the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security have restricted the app from government-owned devices. But Wednesdayās bill would apply to the entire federal workforce.