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By Michael Shepherd - Feb. 13, 2023
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📷 Sen. Angus King spends a few moments on his phone before a news conference at a state building in Bangor on March 15, 2019. (BDN photo by Linda Coan O'Kresik)
Good morning from Augusta. Legislative committees are in today, with the appropriations and education committees taking testimony on the University of Maine System's two-year budget. Watch here.

What we're watching today


Maine's techie senator is at the center of bipartisan skepticism about TikTok's China ties. Sen. Angus King is known by many Mainers for the laptop program he instituted as governor. The 78-year-old runs his own Instagram account, even publishing a coffee-table book compiling his posts. But TikTok, which was briefly the most popular social media platform last year, is not his thing.

On Friday, King joined with Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, to propose a U.S. ban of TikTok and other platforms under the influence of foreign adversaries, including China and Russia. The bill would ban TikTok unless it splits from ByteDance, a Chinese tech giant that has drawn scrutiny for close ties with the country's leadership and pro-regime censorship on the platform.

The site is immensely popular, with about 80 million U.S. users with roughly 62 percent of them under the age on 30, according to Wallaroo Media estimates. But roughly 30 states have taken action to ban TikTok on official devices, including Maine, where the administration of Gov. Janet Mills instructed state employees to remove the app from state devices and personal ones regularly connected to state networks by Feb. 1.

While Republicans have generally been the most outspoken about TikTok, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, said this weekend that Congress should consider a ban. Republicans have often focused on the company's ties to China's communist leaders. The leadership on the issue from King, an independent who operates in the Senate effectively as a Democrat, could show the possibility for a bipartisan deal on the matter.

The company has said it does not share data with the regime, but U.S. officials are skeptical. TikTok has been flagged for aggressively mining data. In a statement, King said every Chinese company must share data with the government, arguing there is no separation between leaders and industry.

"The company must either divest from dangerous foreign ownership, or we will take the necessary steps to protect Americans from potential foreign spying and misinformation operations," King said.
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News and notes

📷 FILE - The exterior of the Internal Revenue Service building in Washington, on March 22, 2013. (AP photo by Susan Walsh)

 

🧾 Here's a deeper look at an IRS decision to not tax Maine relief checks. 

◉ The IRS decided on Friday that Maine's $850 round of relief checks from last year won't be taxed federally. Here's your soundtrack.

â—‰ In a statement, the agency said the decision was made "in the interest of sound tax administration and other factors." While Maine and 16 other states with similar programs got off tax-free, some residents of four states including Massachusetts that processed programs as tax returns will be taxed.

â—‰ State tax expert Jared Walczak of the Tax Foundation praised the decision generally, saying the IRS took a sweeping pro-taxpayer view." But he also notes that the agency "bent the rules" and took a formalistic approach with the four states when every resident who got a check benefited similarly.

â—‰ It was good news for Gov. Janet Mills and her administration, who risked taking some flack for the design of the program had the checks been taxed. In the end, the IRS matched the state's prediction that checks would not be.

đź’Ť Top Democrats are behind a bill to bar child marriages in Maine.

â—‰ Another push to bar Mainers younger than 18 from marrying looks like it is in good position to pass, with Senate President Troy Jackson, D-Allagash, and House Speaker Rachel Talbot Ross, D-Portland, co-sponsoring a measure to do so from Rep. Kevin O'Connell, D-Brewer.

â—‰ Under current law, Mainers need to reach 18 to decide to marry on their own. Parental consent is needed for those aged 16 and 17. Parental and judicial consent are needed for younger children. This bill would wipe out the consent pieces and require each party to a marriage be 18.

◉ These marriages are rare but far from unheard of in Maine. Between 2014 and 2018, 58 Mainers below age 18 got married, according to state data. All of them were 16 and 17, and only four marriages were between two minors. In 10 such marriages, age gaps were greater than five years. Seven of those were between people born outside the U.S., where cultural norms are different.

â—‰ A similar measure died between houses in the last Legislature, but the presiding officers at that time were not on the bill.
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What we're reading


đź”’ Maine prison guards mocked prisoners, disparaged minorities and shared confidential documents in an online chat. None were fired.

🔎 A whistleblower alleges financial improprieties at Maine Veterans Homes.

🏠 Affordable housing will be a top goal in Bangor's new comprehensive plan.

đź’Š This opioid alternative is starting to show up Maine's illicit drug market.

đź©ą Searsport created Maine's first civilian team of first responders.
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