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DOJ urges Supreme Court docket to reject Trump request to delay TikTok ban legislation By Reuters

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(Corrects paragraph 5 to take away extraneous ‘not’)

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Division of Justice requested the Supreme Court docket late on Friday to reject President-elect Donald Trump’s request to delay implementation of a legislation that might ban standard social media app TikTok or drive its sale by Jan. 19.

Final week, Trump filed a authorized transient arguing he ought to have time after taking workplace on Jan. 20 to pursue a “political decision” to the difficulty. The court docket is about to listen to arguments within the case on Jan. 10.

The legislation, handed in April, requires TikTok’s Chinese language proprietor, ByteDance, to divest the platform’s U.S. property or face a ban. TikTok didn’t instantly remark.

The DOJ mentioned in its submitting that Trump’s request may solely be granted if ByteDance had established it was more likely to succeed on the deserves however the firm had not executed so.

DOJ mentioned nobody disputes China “seeks to undermine U.S. pursuits by amassing delicate information about Individuals and interesting in covert and malign affect operations.”

The federal government asserted that “nobody can critically dispute that (China’s) management of TikTok by means of ByteDance represents a grave menace to nationwide safety: TikTok’s assortment of reams of delicate information about 170 million Individuals and their contacts makes it a robust device for espionage.”

Trump lawyer D. John Sauer wrote final week the president-elect “respectfully requests that the Court docket think about staying the Act’s deadline for divestment of January 19, 2025, whereas it considers the deserves of this case, thus allowing President Trump’s incoming administration the chance to pursue a political decision of the questions at subject within the case.”

TikTok on Friday urged the Supreme Court docket to dam the legislation on free-speech grounds beneath the First Modification of the U.S. Structure. It mentioned Congress had not sought to ban Chinese language-owned apps like Shein or Temu, which strongly suggests “it focused TikTok for its social-media content material, not its information.”

If the court docket doesn’t block the legislation by Jan. 19, new downloads of TikTok on Apple (NASDAQ:) or Google (NASDAQ:) app shops can be banned however current customers may proceed to entry the app. Providers would degrade over time and ultimately cease working as firms might be barred from offering help.

© Reuters. A view shows the office of TikTok after the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill that would give TikTok's Chinese owner ByteDance about six months to divest the U.S. assets of the short-video app or face a ban, in Culver City, California, March 13, 2024.  REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

Biden may prolong the deadline by 90 days if he certifies ByteDance is making substantial progress towards a divestiture.

Trump’s help for TikTok is a reversal from 2020, when he tried to dam the app in america and drive its sale to American firms due to its Chinese language possession.



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