President Trump’s efforts to force TikTok’s Chinese parent company to sell the popular app, all while keeping it available to U.S. users despite Sunday’s ban, raise a slew of legal and
US President Joe Biden won’t enforce a ban on the social media app TikTok that is set to take effect a day before he leaves office on Monday. In a statement, Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre cited timing as the reason responsibility for implementing the law was being passed to the incoming Trump administration.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) said he had a “great meeting” with Kevin O’Leary on Tuesday at the White House. “It’s a new era of AMERICAN business growth with President Trump
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called TikTok’s threat to “go dark” on Sunday, January 19th, a “stunt,” and that there is no reason for TikTok to shut itself down before President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in on the 20th.
In 2017, weeks after Donald Trump’s first presidential election victory, Xi Jinping became the first Chinese head of state to address the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland — winning applause as he inveighed against protectionism and declared that a trade war would hurt both sides.
Top leaders from the House and Senate left the White House and gave reporters completely contradictory accounts of how his agenda would be passed. In other words, Trump is already showing his split-screen approach to congressional relations — one that,
Here's a 2025 conundrum for Apple, Google, and Oracle when it comes to TikTok: Do they follow President Trump's orders? Or do they follow the law?
Two days after Donald Trump's formal inauguration as the 47th U.S. President and the former businessman has already had a Diet Coke button re-installed.