President Trump signed an executive order giving more time for TikTok to work out a deal to prevent a ban in the U.S. A document posted on the
Measure directs Justice Department to not enforce the law for 75 days while administration determines “the appropriate course forward.”
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday delaying the U.S.'s ban on TikTok by 75 days, giving the Chinese-owned social media app time to find a U.S. buyer.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order to further delay the TikTok ban in the U.S. In a statement shared hours after he was sworn in on Monday, Jan. 20, Trump announced he was giving TikTok 75 more days before a law banning the social media platform in the U.S. would take effect.
Trump signed his first wave of executive orders around 7 p.m. Monday, after his swearing-in ceremony a parade, and before the inaugural balls.
President Trump signed an executive order Monday aimed at protecting TikTok from a new law banning the app. Legal experts say this order still leaves the company on shaky ground.
The president-elect Sunday pledged an executive order, hours into his second term, returning access for American users, at least temporarily.
President-elect Donald Trump is considering ways to prevent TikTok’s potential ban, which could include issuing an executive order, according to The Washington Post, as the Supreme Court appears ...
President Donald Trump set a record on his first day back in office by issuing 26 executive orders, aiming to fulfill many of his campaign promises.
In an executive order signed on Monday, Trump instructed the U.S. attorney general to not enforce the ban for 75 days while his administration determines “the appropriate course forward in an orderly way that protects national security while avoiding an abrupt shutdown” of TikTok.
Kevin O’Leary says that he’s still interested in deal for TikTok, but that it’s no longer legally viable, even after Trump extended a ban on the platform.