With the court signaling it will release a decision on Friday, lobbyists for the app pushed lawmakers to shift course.
In a meeting Tuesday with top GOP leaders, he didn’t move to settle key strategic disputes over raising the debt limit and passing the party’s big domestic policy package. Top leaders from the House and Senate left the White House and gave reporters completely contradictory accounts of how his agenda would be passed.
On Capitol Hill, TikTok’s supporters were heavily outnumbered: The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act cleared the House on a 360-58 vote, and the 79-18 ...
For now, TikTok’s ability to operate stateside hangs in the balance after the Supreme Court upheld the law demanding that TikTok divest from its Chinese owner or face a ban.
With the ban on Tiktok ban just two days away, officials on Capitol Hill are standing by the decision to ban the app in the United States. “The CCP is using TikTok
Welcome to The Hill’s Technology newsletter {beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story Supreme Court skeptical of TikTok’s attempt to fight ban TikTok received a frosty
Welcome to The Hill’s Technology newsletter {beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story TikTok’s future hangs in balance at Supreme Court TikTok’s future will hang
Donald Trump has had four years to plot what he would do if he ever became president again. Today, he’ll start making that a reality.
Congress labeled the app’s Chinese ownership a national security risk and passed a law that would ban the social media platform unless it was sold. TikTok and creators say that violates their free speech rights.
Donald Trump initiated concrete plans to ban TikTok in mid-2020, during his first term as president. In early 2024, on his way to winning another election, he changed his stance. Here's a look at his statements regarding the Chinese-owned social media platform.