Facebook Inc disclosed that it also spent its most ever on US government lobbying in 2018, $12.62 million.
Alphabet
Inc's
Google disclosed on Tuesday that it spent a company-record $21.2
million on lobbying the United States government in 2018, topping its
previous high of $18.22 million in 2012, as the search engine
operator fights wide-ranging scrutiny into its practices.
Google
said in a quarterly disclosure to Congress that it spent $4.9 million
on lobbying activities during the fourth quarter, slightly above $4.4
million in the same period a year ago. The 2018 total also surpassed
$18.04 million spent on lobbying in 2017, according to tracking of
the filings by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.
Google
declined to comment beyond its filing.
Facebook
Inc disclosed that it also spent its most ever on US government
lobbying in 2018, $12.62 million. That was up from $11.51 million a
year ago, according to the Center for Responsive Politics data.
Microsoft
Corp spent $9.52 million on lobbying in 2018, according to its
disclosure on Tuesday, up from $8.5 million in 2017.
Lawmakers
and regulators have weighed new privacy and antitrust rules to rein
in the power of large internet service providers such as Google,
Facebook Inc and Amazon.com Inc .
Google
Chief Executive Sundar Pichai, who testified in December before a US
House of Representatives panel for the first time, has said the
company backs the idea of national privacy legislation. But he has
contested accusations of the company having a political bias in its
search results and of stifling competition.
The
company disclosed that among new lobbying areas in the fourth quarter
were its search technology, criminal justice reform and international
tax reform. Google is perennially among the top lobbying spenders in
Washington.
Regulatory
backlash in the United States, as well as Europe and Asia, is near
the top of the list of concerns for Alphabet
investors, according to financial analysts. Shares of Alphabet closed
down 2.6 percent on Tuesday.
The
company appointed former General Electric executive Karan Bhatia as
its head of global policy last year. Susan Molinari, Google's top
U.S. public policy official, stepped down to take on an advisory role
this month.
Amazon.com
Inc's filing was expected later on Tuesday.
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