Law professor Stephen Vladeck has said Trump's bid to delay a law targeting TikTok could damage the relationship between the presidency and the Supreme Court.
The president-elect has filed a request with the Supreme Court to pause the enforcement of a law that could ban TikTok in the U.S.
In 2020, he moved to ban the Chinese-owned app. Now, he is opposing the Biden administration’s effort to do just that.
President-elect Donald Trump urged the Supreme Court to pause a controversial ban on TikTok that is set to take effect next month, telling the justices in a legal filing Friday that a delay would allow his administration to “pursue a negotiated resolution.
President-elect Donald Trump has labeled himself as a master negotiator. As the wildly popular social media platform, TikTok, is set to be banned in the U.S. one day before he is back in the White House, the incoming commander-in-chief says he wants to hav ...
RNC Youth Advisory Council Chair Brilyn Hollyhand wants the President-elect to stay connected to younger voters once in the White House.
In his message to the Supreme Court, Trump asserts a myriad of reasons as to why he's uniquely positioned to address the supposed national security concerns tied with TikTok being owned by a China-based company while simultaneously saving the platform from a ban.
On Friday, Dec. 27, Trump submitted a legal filing asking for a delay so that his administration could "pursue a negotiated resolution" to the TikTok ban. Trump's filing is in direct competition with the Biden administration, who wrote in a briefing on Friday that TikTok poses a "grave" threat to national security.
Even worse, according to FBI Director Chris Wray's testimony before Congress, TikTok is a national security threat because the Chinese government can use the app to peddle propaganda and false information to American users. China might even be able to use TikTok to hack Americans' phones and other devices.
STORY: The U.S. Supreme Court hears arguments Friday over a federal law that would force a sale of the Chinese-owned short video app TikTok by January 19th or face a ban on national security grounds.TikTok and its China-based parent company ByteDance have sued to block the law from taking effect,
Although former President Donald Trump issued an executive order in 2020 directing ByteDance to divest itself of TikTok in the United States, his amicus brief in the Supreme Court, filed late last month,