The House once again passed a bill that could ban TikTok from the US unless its Chinese parent company ByteDance divests it — but this time, it’s in a way that will be harder for the Senate to stall.

The bill passed 360-58 as part of a larger bill related to sanctions on foreign adversaries like Russia. It’s part of a package of foreign aid bills that seek to provide military aid to Ukraine and Israel and humanitarian aid to Gaza. Due to the urgency of the funds, packaging the TikTok bill with these measures means that the Senate will need to consider the proposal more swiftly than it would as a standalone bill. The earlier TikTok bill, which passed the House 352-65 just last month, has so far lingered in the Senate, with lawmakers there giving mixed messages about its future.

Notably, Senate Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell (D-WA), whose committee would normally take up the bill before it proceeds to the floor, had remained noncommittal about it. But after the version in the foreign aid package was released, she said she supported the legislation.

  • @gorysubparbagel
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    218 months ago

    Definitely makes sense to bundle banning an app with foreign aid, lol. Love how our government works. Now if someone opposes the tiktok ban, they’re also voting no to the aid to ukraine which is just insane.

    • @Ranvier
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      48 months ago

      No, they were separate bills. The Ukraine aid was on a different bill than the TikTok one. There was roughly speaking, a Ukraine aid bill, a Taiwan aid bill, an Israel aid bill, and the tik tok bill. All were voted on and passed separately.

      • @gorysubparbagel
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        38 months ago

        They’re all in the same bill “H.R.8038 - 21st Century Peace through Strength Act” if you click that link in the post, that bill mentions the Ukraine aid as well as bytedance and tiktok