Biden administration response if TikTok ban is not delayed by January 19, 2024
Enforce the ban • 25%
Seek further negotiations • 25%
Issue an executive order • 25%
Other • 25%
Official statements or policy actions announced by the Biden administration.
Trump Files Amicus Brief Urging Supreme Court to Delay January 19 TikTok Ban
Dec 28, 2024, 12:02 AM
President-elect Donald Trump has filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court, requesting a delay of the implementation of a law that would ban TikTok in the United States on January 19, the day before his inauguration. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear TikTok's challenge against the ban on January 10. Trump argues that pausing the ban would allow his administration to pursue a 'negotiated resolution' to address national security concerns associated with the popular social media app. This move comes shortly after President Biden's Justice Department filed its main brief to the Supreme Court on the matter. TikTok, owned by Chinese company ByteDance, faces a deadline to sell its U.S. operations or face a ban under the current law.
View original story
Definitive statement issued • 25%
Ban enforced • 25%
No statement issued • 25%
Ban lifted • 25%
Other actions • 25%
Divest from ByteDance • 25%
Challenge in court • 25%
Comply with the ban • 25%
No action taken • 25%
Other action • 25%
Opposes the ban • 25%
Supports the ban • 25%
Sell U.S. operations • 25%
Shut down U.S. operations • 25%
Other • 25%
Comply with ban • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Other actions • 25%
Seek Supreme Court intervention • 25%
Negotiate with U.S. government • 25%
Comply with the ban • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
TikTok complies with data provision • 25%
No significant action • 25%
U.S. government extends deadline • 25%
TikTok initiates legal action • 25%
Ban is repealed • 33%
Ban is modified • 34%
Ban remains in place • 33%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Other outcome • 25%
Delay the ban • 25%
Uphold the ban • 25%
Overturn the ban • 25%