Alibaba Wins Temporary Reprieve from US Lobbying Ban
A federal judge has ordered the Pentagon to grant Alibaba temporary relief from a law that led to the loss of its Washington lobbyists, while a court considers the measure’s constitutionality.
Background
- July 5, 2026: A federal judge intervenes, allowing Alibaba temporary access to Washington lobbyists.
- Source: Bloomberg
The Legal Battle
Alibaba sued the Defense Department after being added to the Pentagon’s Section 1260H list of alleged Chinese military companies in June. This addition sparked a lobbying exodus as a separate provision (Section 851) barred contracts with firms lobbying for listed companies.
Alibaba argues this violates due process and First Amendment rights. The judge’s ruling restores lobbyist access while the court assesses the law’s constitutionality.
Broader Implications
- 1260H Label: Imposes no sanctions but carries significant reputational and commercial weight. Baidu and BYD are also contesting their designations.
- Trade Curbs: Beijing has retaliated with trade restrictions on 56 US firms. Washington has held off on blacklisting DeepSeek and over 100 other Chinese firms, using the list as a bargaining chip.
- Alibaba’s Reprieve: Narrow but provisional; the blacklist remains in place. Still, a court examining the law’s constitutionality gives all 188 listed companies legal grounds to fight back.