NO ONE LOVES TIKTOK DIVESTMENT PLAN: The Biden administration has demanded that TikTok company ByteDance sell its stake in the popular video platform or face a ban on the app in the U.S., but the proposal was panned among key lawmakers and TikTok’s chief executive alike. — TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew told The Wall Street Journal “that divesting the company from its Chinese owners — a move the U.S. is now demanding — doesn’t offer any more protection than a multibillion-dollar plan TikTok has already proposed,” which would involve storing users’ data in the U.S. and partnering with American cloud giant Oracle to act as a firewall between that data and access to it or influence from the Chinese government. — The administration’s proposal also got a lukewarm reception from two lawmakers leading the charge in Congress to clamp down on TikTok, POLITICO’s Brendan Bordelon reports. “I’m not convinced the Biden administration is serious about it,” said Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee. — Senate Intelligence Chair Mark Warner (D-Va.), meanwhile, said that “I’ve still got a lot of questions — whether divestiture is enough?” Warner added that he’d want to know where the source code for TikTok’s algorithm would reside under the Biden plan. FOX TAPS NEW TOP LOBBYIST: Fox Corp. is promoting Kristopher Jones to executive vice president and head of its government relations team after the company’s former top lobbyist, Danny O’Brien, left the media giant. — Jones has been with the company since before it was spun off from 21st Century Fox, and previously worked at the National Association of Broadcasters. Fox also promoted Jamie Gillespie, another NAB alum and a former Senate Commerce aide, to executive vice president for government relations. SAFE RELAUNCHES WITH A NEW FACE: “A group that was set up to fight a prior Biden administration-backed tax increase on generational wealth transfers is launching a new campaign raising concerns about Democrats’ proposals to tax the richest households based on the value of unsold assets like stock, homes and art,” Roll Call’s Laura Weiss reports. — The advocacy group, dubbed Saving America’s Family Enterprises, or SAFE, has tapped Louisiana senator-turned-lobbyist John Breaux to serve as a senior adviser and the face of its new campaign, which includes an initial seven-figure ad buy in key swing states where Democrats will be defending seats next year. — The offensive against taxing unrealized gains at death is the latest attempt by Democrats in Washington to hike taxes on the wealthy and on major corporations, and the latest to run into opposition steered by friendly faces. SAFE’s first iteration in 2021 sought to sink a similar proposal in Democrats’ sprawling reconciliation plans with the help of another red state Senate Democrat, North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp. — Blanche Lincoln, the former Democratic senator from Arkansas, served as the face of a business coalition looking to fight an increase in the corporate tax rate, while former Montana Democrat Max Baucus, who served as the chair of the Senate Finance Committee, penned op-eds criticizing attempts to close the so-called step-up basis loophole and crack down on so-called “mega” IRA accounts. MEET ‘EM WHERE THEY’RE AT: Policymakers’ attention comes at a premium, making it all the more critical for those seeking to influence officials to be efficient with their resources, and it helps to know where D.C. insiders are turning for their dose of news and entertainment. That’s the idea behind Subject Matter’s more-or-less biannual policy insider media habits survey, the most recent findings of which were shared with PI exclusively. — This year’s survey was fielded in January and polled 204 members of a proprietary panel put together by the firm’s third-party research partner Quadrant which consists of current and former public and private sector policy professionals, according to survey leader Dianne Mikeska. — The findings, Mikeska told PI, allow the firm to provide more targeted advice to clients on how to reach the people in charge of setting policy. “There are a lot of important issues, and not necessarily with the biggest budgets available,” she said. “We’re able to counsel them on the places where they might have the most impact, because we know that that’s where the eyeballs are the interest or the engagement is.” — This year’s survey found that D.C.’s top destination for policy news (POLITICO) and insiders’ self-reported most trusted source of news (The New York Times) haven’t changed since 2021. But it logged an interesting partisan shift in social media usage: For the first time, Republican Twitter users in the survey overtook Democrats, with 69 percent of Republicans estimating they use the platform daily or almost daily, compared with just over half of Democratic respondents. — Republicans drove Twitter’s first appearance in the survey as a most-trusted source of news, even as the vast majority of those surveyed — 73 percent — denied that Twitter’s new conservative-friendly owner would have an impact on how often they use the platform. That wasn’t the case for Democrats in the survey, about half of whom predicted they’ll use the platform less because of its new owner. — And in great news for your host, the survey also found that while generally, respondents have turned away from a number of their daily media habits since 2021 — there were drops in reading news online, streaming TV shows and movies, browsing Instagram, LinkedIn and Facebook and listening to podcasts and streaming radio — insiders are increasingly reading email newsletters. — Online newsletters tied with web searches as the second-most-popular daily media habit, with 77 percent responding that they read one almost daily — up from 69 percent in 2021.
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