Huawei ends US lobbying operations after years of fighting ban

At its height, Huawei had nine lobbying firms on its payroll and a small army of public relations representatives. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON - Huawei Technologies, the Chinese wireless equipment maker that spent tens of millions of dollars trying to win over US policymakers only to eventually be blacklisted, has shuttered its in-house lobbying operations in Washington.

Huawei’s last two registered lobbyists there – Mr Jeff Hogg and Mr Donald Morrissey – left in recent months, Bloomberg News found.

Huawei filed its own notice that it was terminating lobbying efforts at the Capitol. 

The lobbyists’ recent departures follow an exodus of staff from Huawei’s US operations, and marks a quiet end to the company’s costly, years-long effort to maintain presence in the North American market. The firm reached its peak by supplying small mobile firms across the United States, even as major carriers shunned it. Rising tensions with Beijing eventually all but banned it.

More than a decade ago, Washington officials began warning of Huawei’s ability to embed spying capabilities in its gear, which was present in thousands of cell towers and other network equipment in the US. The company pushed back on those claims, saying its products posed no threat, but American regulators by 2022 had barred the company from selling products in the US and moved to starve it of access to cutting-edge technology.

At its height, Huawei had nine lobbying firms on its payroll and a small army of public relations representatives. Executives were known to regularly arrange briefings with congressional offices and major newsrooms. The company spent more than US$13 million (S$17 million) lobbying in the past 10 years, according to federal filings.

Some of that went to glitzy parties populated by high-profile hired guns including veteran Democratic lobbyist Tony Podesta, who made US$1 million from Huawei that year, according to disclosures with the US Senate. Mr Podesta said in a filing that his work for Huawei ended on Dec 30, 2022.

With a ban firmly in place and its US business scant, Huawei has little reason to keep burning through lobbying cash in Washington. “The US market isn’t a likely place for a breakthrough for Huawei in the near future,” said Mr Chris Pereira, a former Huawei public relations executive and founder of the consultancy iMpact.

The company has lost outside lobbying firms as well. Imperium Global Advisers and LeMunyon Group terminated their contracts with Futurewei, Huawei’s US-based research arm, in November 2023, according to filings with the Senate. And Squire Patton Boggs, a global law firm, has not reported lobbying activity to Congress on Futurewei’s behalf since the beginning of 2023. Former US representative Lee Terry, Republican of Nebraska, terminated his lobbying contract with Huawei at the end of 2022, according to filings with the Senate.

By October, the only firm registered as working on Huawei’s behalf was Sidley Austin, which did not respond to requests for comment.

In response to Huawei’s ban, China’s government has accused the US of abusing state power to hobble Chinese companies. Huawei in recent months offered its own de facto response, producing a new phone using highly advanced technology the US has been trying to keep out of China’s hands. The company says revenue surged 9 per cent in 2023, in part thanks to the new phone. BLOOMBERG

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