Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Facebookโ€™s parent company, Meta, has been paying one of the most prominent Republican consulting firms to run a nationwide campaign to sow distrust about one of the companyโ€™s top competitors, TikTok, according to a new report from The Washington Post on Wednesday.

The firm, Targeted Victory, reportedly planted op-eds and letters to the editor in major local and regional newspapers across the country. A Targeted Victory director told staff that the firm needed to โ€œget the message out that while Meta is the current punching bag, TikTok is the real threat especially as a foreign owned app that is #1 in sharing data that young teens are using,โ€ according to emails obtained by The Post.

โ€œTikTok is the real threatโ€

News of Facebookโ€™s decision to hire the firm comes only a few weeks after the company declared that it was losing users for the first time in its 18-year history. Metaโ€™s recent earnings report said that Facebookโ€™s active users dropped by almost 500,000 at the end of last year.

Several of Targeted Victoryโ€™s op-eds contained links to negative news coverage about TikTok and were often bylined by influential community figures and politicians, including Democrats. The Post reported that none of the columns disclosed their connection to the Facebook-funded firm.

Over the last few years, Facebook has been under fire by Congress for allegedly holding an illegal monopoly in the social media industry. During a 2020 hearing with tech CEOs, including Facebookโ€™s Mark Zuckerberg, lawmakers cited internal company documents suggesting that Zuckerberg would go โ€œdestroy modeโ€ if Instagram, a then-nascent competitor, refused to be sold to the social media giant.

โ€œWhen the dominant platform threatens its potential rivals, that should not be a normal business practice,โ€ Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) said at the time.

Targeted Victory is one of the biggest vendors for Republican campaigns. In 2020, the firm earned over $230 million, and its largest clients were from groups like the pro-Trump super PAC, America First Action. Republicans have been some of TikTokโ€™s harshest critics. Lawmakers like Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) have pushed for the app to be investigated for censorship, and former President Donald Trump signed an executive order to ban it outright.

Ultimately, the order went nowhere, and President Joe Biden revoked it last year.

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