Members of the House Intelligence Committee have formally requested the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to provide a briefing regarding data concerns associated with Chinese-owned company Temu. The briefing request specifically relates to the company’s relationship with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and U.S. national security concerns.
According to the Intelligence Committee letter, addressed to FBI Director Christopher Wray and SEC Chairman Gary Gensler, the lawmakers want to review allegations that Temu relies on slave labor and unfair trade practices and shares user data with CCP and Chinese military intelligence. The lawmakers referenced prior concerns that various entities, including U.S. Senators, the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, states’ Attorneys General, and others, had raised about Temu and its parent company, PDD Holdings.
Temu is a major online e-commerce company where consumers can purchase clothing and other goods at extremely cheap prices and have them shipped directly from China. The website maintains a large ad presence on Facebook and Instagram.
The committee members have urged the FBI and the SEC to provide detailed insights and updates on their investigations into Temu’s activities. They stress the importance of understanding the scope and depth of any data and security risks posed by the company.
This move by the House Intelligence Committee reflects heightened concerns about the influence and reach of Chinese companies with purported close ties to the Chinese Communist state. Earlier this year, Congress moved to ban the TikTok app unless its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, sells the social media video platform to a non-Chinese-controlled entity. Currently, ByteDance is suing the U.S. government over the forced TikTok sale, though a court ruling on the matter has yet to be made.