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Trump gives TikTok another ban extension

Trump gives TikTok another ban extension

  • President Donald Trump has extended the deadline for TikTok to spin out from its Chinese parent company ByteDance by another 90 days, until mid-September.
  • The extension provides temporary legal cover for TikTok’s US service providers, but its legality is shaky since it was not codified into law and has been upheld as constitutional only by the Supreme Court.
  • Several lawmakers have warned that Trump’s repeated extensions are untenable and illegal, with some calling them a “sham” if the algorithm doesn’t move out of Chinese hands.
  • The US government is working to ensure a deal is closed within the next 90 days, but it’s unclear what would prevent Trump from approving indefinite extensions or a deal that doesn’t meet the letter of the law.
  • A court could evaluate whether Trump’s actions are legal if someone sues to stop the extension, but so far, nobody has filed such a lawsuit, and some lawmakers have expressed concerns about the lack of enforcement mechanisms in place.

For the third time, President Donald Trump has extended the deadline for TikTok to spin out from its Chinese parent company or face a US ban. As White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed in a statement Tuesday, Trump signed an executive order on Thursday extending the deadline another 90 days, landing the new deadline in mid-September.

The Trump administration will spend the next 90 days “working to ensure this deal is closed so that the American people can continue to use TikTok with the assurance that their data is safe and secure,” Leavitt said.

The extension, first signed on January 20th, theoretically offers legal cover for TikTok’s US service providers who are subject to the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act from the hundreds of billions in penalties they could face for keeping the app online and in US app stores. But that legal cover was already shaky given that Trump’s extensions are not codified into the law, which was passed overwhelmingly by a bipartisan vote in Congress, and upheld as constitutional by the Supreme Court.

As The Verge previously reported, ByteDance and an Oracle-led coalition had nearly hammered out a deal in April, but Trump’s tariffs abruptly blew up the tentative agreement. While trade tensions between the US and China have simmered down, there’s been no recent news about resurrecting that deal or another one. Even when a sale seemed likely, it was unclear whether China would allow ByteDance to sell the valuable algorithm that powers TikTok’s video recommendations.

“The whole thing is a sham if the algorithm doesn’t move from out of Beijing’s hands”

Several lawmakers, including those who’ve criticized a divest-or-ban law for TikTok and ByteDance, have warned that Trump’s repeated extensions are untenable and illegal. After Trump’s last extension in April, Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chair Mark Warner (D-VA) told The Verge the move was “against the law” and said “the whole thing is a sham if the algorithm doesn’t move from out of Beijing’s hands.”

Even before the second extension, Sens. Ed Markey (D-MA), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), and Cory Booker (D-NJ), who oppose a ban of TikTok, wrote Trump that it would be “unacceptable and unworkable for your Administration to continue ignoring the requirements in the law.” They warned, “any further extensions of the TikTok deadline will require Oracle, Apple, Google, and other companies to continue risking ruinous legal liability, a difficult decision to justify in perpetuity.”

That’s because TikTok service providers in the US can be fined for facilitating access to the app after the ban deadline, and Trump’s extensions fall outside of the mechanisms allowed for in the law. So far, however, these companies appear to be relying on assurances from the administration that they won’t be sued for keeping TikTok online, although it reportedly took a letter from the US attorney general herself to assuage Apple and Google’s concerns.

A court could evaluate whether Trump’s actions are legal, but only if somebody sues to stop the extension — and so far, nobody has. Earlier this month, though, a Google shareholder filed a lawsuit against the company for allegedly failing to share internal records about its decision to flout the law under the Justice Department’s assurances. The same shareholder had already filed suit against the DOJ for allegedly failing to share information about its decision not to enforce the law against Apple and Google.

While members of Trump’s party generally haven’t gone so far as to call his extensions illegal, a dozen House Republicans said in a statement in April that “any resolution must ensure that U.S. law is followed, and that the Chinese Communist Party does not have access to American user data or the ability to manipulate the content consumed by Americans.” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) told reporters that month that Trump “ought to enforce the statute and ban TikTok. This middle way, I don’t think is viable.”

But it’s not clear what would prevent Trump from approving indefinite extensions or a deal that doesn’t meet the letter of the law. As Hawley acknowledged while speaking to reporters in April, “Congress, we don’t have an enforcement arm of our own.”

Update June 19th, 12:00 PM: Post has been updated to note Trump signed the order extending the deadline.

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Q. Who has extended the deadline for TikTok to spin out from its Chinese parent company or face a US ban?
A. President Donald Trump has extended the deadline for the third time.

Q. What is the new deadline for TikTok to spin out from its Chinese parent company?
A. The new deadline is in mid-September, 90 days after the previous extension.

Q. Why did Trump extend the deadline again?
A. To ensure that the deal is closed and American users can continue to use TikTok with assurance that their data is safe and secure.

Q. What legal mechanism does the law provide for dealing with TikTok’s US service providers?
A. The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act provides penalties of hundreds of billions of dollars for keeping the app online and in US app stores.

Q. Why are Trump’s extensions considered shaky?
A. They are not codified into the law, which was passed overwhelmingly by a bipartisan vote in Congress, and upheld as constitutional by the Supreme Court.

Q. What happened to a deal between ByteDance and an Oracle-led coalition in April?
A. Trump’s tariffs abruptly blew up the tentative agreement, and there has been no recent news about resurrecting it or another deal.

Q. Who warned that Trump’s repeated extensions are untenable and illegal?
A. Several lawmakers, including Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chair Mark Warner (D-VA), have warned that Trump’s actions are against the law.

Q. What is at stake for TikTok service providers in the US if they don’t comply with the ban deadline?
A. They can be fined for facilitating access to the app after the ban deadline, and risk ruinous legal liability.

Q. Why did a Google shareholder file a lawsuit against the company?
A. The shareholder alleged that Google failed to share internal records about its decision to flout the law under the Justice Department’s assurances.

Q. What is the current status of Trump’s actions regarding TikTok?
A. A court could evaluate whether Trump’s actions are legal, but only if somebody sues to stop the extension – and so far, nobody has.