TikTok’s plan to stave off government intervention: Flood D.C. with influencers

Authored by politico.com and submitted by poirot100

Another person familiar with the plans noted that TikTok was paying for the cost of sending influencers to D.C. It was not clear which influencers would be making the trip.

“Lawmakers in Washington debating TikTok should hear firsthand from people whose lives would be directly affected by their decisions,” said TikTok spokesperson Jamal Brown. “We look forward to welcoming our creators to our nation’s capital, helping them make their voices heard, and continuing to drive meaningful impact in their lives and for their communities.”

The Information first reported the invitation to creators.

The influencer push will not be TikTok’s only attempt to sway government officials in Washington next week. The app’s CEO Shou Zi Chew is also slated to testify before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Thursday.

ByteDance has amassed an army of public relations and lobbying professionals in recent years to fend off threats to its business, which first began with efforts by the Trump administration to effectively ban the app. Although the Biden administration rescinded those executive orders, measures to ban the app have intensified among members of both parties in recent months. Recently, the White House offered its support for a bipartisan bill that could ban TikTok. The Justice Department is also reportedly investigating ByteDance for spying on American citizens, including journalists who have reported on the tech industry.

As the administration has mulled the app’s fate in the U.S, the company brought on the Biden-connected public relations and political consulting firm, SKDK. Among former SKDK employees who occupy the administration’s ranks are Anita Dunn, who was a founding partner of the firm and is now a senior advisor to Biden.

The political blowback for TikTok extends far beyond Washington. Just Thursday, the U.K. banned the app from government phones.

Brendan Bordelon contributed to this report.

throw-a-weasel on March 19th, 2023 at 13:48 UTC »

In Washington, those are just called lobbyists.

BananaBrute on March 19th, 2023 at 13:29 UTC »

Sounds like a very bad idea, I mean won't it make most people who aren't on tiktok hate it even more? The influencer types aren't the best mascots outside of the platform, I think.

Hidden-Syndicate on March 19th, 2023 at 12:58 UTC »

It is really odd to me that the contrasting of tik tok, youtube, Twitter, and facebooks’s ban in China isn’t a larger talking point here. It reeks of hypocrisy every-time the Chinese government speaks on the western nations’ banning of tik tok or restrictions on government devices.

You would think this would be an extremely easy and effective talking point to push back with but I don’t see it being utilized by western govs/politicians as much as I would have thought.