A trade group with deep ties to Apple and Google fired off a press release praising a child-online-safety bill before it was even formally introduced.
A trade group whose funding base is dominated by Apple and Google fired off a press release praising a Senate child-online-safety bill before that bill was formally introduced, and Capitol Hill noticed.
Lobbying watchers say the timing has nothing to do with public-relations awkwardness and everything to do with how preferential the eventual bill text was expected to be for Big Tech. Whether the trade group jumped the gun on a leak, on a draft, or on a phone call is the question staff offices are now circulating.
A separate bill that takes a tougher line on app-store accountability is the unspoken context. Sponsors of that proposal say the trade group's enthusiasm for the Senate text is itself an argument for theirs.
The administration has not weighed in. Industry players are bracing for both bills to grind through committees this summer, and for the lobbying around both to make today's press release look restrained.