TikTok ban bill is 'about conduct,' not content: Rep. Pfluger

The US House's Committee on Energy and Commerce voted unanimously to push forward a bill pressuring TikTok parent company ByteDance to step away from the popular app's US operations or face a nationwide ban. The Senate has yet to vote on the bill.

"We haven't seen a vote like that in four or five, six years maybe... this was something that I think all of us came together, both sides of the aisle, and the goal here is that we want to make sure that Americans are safe, we want to make sure that data is safe, we want to make sure that a foreign adversary is not taking advantage like we think they are of an application and using Americans and our privacy to their advantage," Rep. August Pfluger (R-Tx.) told Yahoo Finance's Josh Lipton.

TikTok has responded online, posting that the likelihood of a US ban for the app will ultimately harm businesses and business owners. Rep. Pfluger says that American business owners should "reach out to TikTok, they need to let them know that it's in their best interest to sell to somebody who is trusted," iterating that this conflict is "about the link to a foreign adversary that has control over it."

"When [ByteDance CEO] Shou Chew sat in our committee almost a year ago and testified in front of Congress, he admitted that it was possible that the Chinese Communist Party could manipulate messages, he said that not us," Pfluger states.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

JOSH LIPTON: House Energy and Commerce Committee voted unanimously 52 to 0 to advance a bill that would require TikTok owner ByteDance to divest the app or effectively face a ban in the US. Earlier, I spoke with a member of that committee representative August Pfluger.

AUGUST PFLUGER: Well, look, I mean, you saw a vote yesterday out of the Energy and Commerce Committee that was 52 to 0. It was completely bipartisan unanimous. We had a great legislative hearing before we went to the markup.

I mean, we haven't seen a vote like that in four, or five, six years maybe. I mean, this was something that I think all of us came together both sides of the aisle. And the goal here is that we want to make sure that Americans are safe. We want to make sure that data is safe. We want to make sure that a foreign adversary is not taking advantage like we think they are of an application and using Americans and our privacy to their advantage.

JOSH LIPTON: And, you know, Congressman, TikTok is firing right back here. And I want to read you their response here. They say this legislation has a predetermined outcome, a total ban of TikTok in the United States.