In a rare display of bipartisanship, the House of Representatives has overwhelmingly voted in favor of a bill that seeks to ban TikTok in the United States or force its sale to a non-Chinese entity. The newly advanced legislation poses another in a long list of hurdles for TikTok's stateside ambitions.
The U.S. government has been scrutinizing the popular social media app for a while now, citing national security concerns. Since 2020, numerous state and federal agencies have prohibited employees from using TikTok on government-issued devices. In May 2023, Montana passed a blanket TikTok ban, the first and so far only U.S. law to prohibit the use of the app on personal devices. That legislation is currently being challenged in court.
In the meantime, the federal government has now doubled down on its attempts to ban TikTok on a national level. A March 13 session saw the lower chamber of the Congress vote 352-65 in favor of the so-called Protecting Americans From Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act. The legislation in question, designated as H.R.7521, aims to prohibit all app stores from distributing TikTok in the U.S. for as long as the social media platform is owned by the Beijing-based ByteDance. The company would have 180 days to sell the app to a non-Chinese entity in the event the bill becomes law.
Following this turn of events, the bill now has to pass another vote in the Senate and get signed by the President before becoming law. While the chances of the TikTok ban being approved by the upper chamber of the Congress are currently unclear, President Biden has already gone on record to state he would support the bill should it reach the Oval Office. In doing so, he dismissed the possibility of the legislation being stopped in its tracks by the so-called pocket veto. Then again, even that outcome wouldn't necessarily be the end of it, as the President's veto can still be overridden by two-thirds majority votes in both parliamentary chambers; the House of
Read more on gamerant.com