Trump claims he’ll ‘save’ TikTok - despite trying to get it banned while in office - Both Biden and Trump administrations sought to ban TikTok
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday will hold a hearing on the ban of TikTok, which carries implications on the global marketplace, technology, freedom of speech and national security.
WHATEVER ELSE YOU MIGHT SAY ABOUT HIM, Donald Trump does not lack ambition. For him, making vast, sweeping promises to solve every problem the country has ever faced comes as naturally as, well, lying. Here is a partial list of things he has promised to make happen “on Day One” of his second administration.
The justices are weighing a First Amendment challenge to the TikTok ban law, which is set to take effect just before Trump's inauguration.
In 2020, he moved to ban the Chinese-owned app. Now, he is opposing the Biden administration’s effort to do just that.
Law professor Stephen Vladeck has said Trump's bid to delay a law targeting TikTok could damage the relationship between the presidency and the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments Friday on a law that could ban new downloads or updates of TikTok in the U.S.
TikTok says it plans to shut down the social media site in the US by Jan. 19 unless the Supreme Court strikes down.
President-elect Donald Trump is set to be sentenced Friday after multiple attempts to delay or block the sentencing in his hush money case. Trump argued that the Supreme Court’s ruling last year on presidential immunity means evidence used in the trial was improper.
Donald Trump is set to be sentenced by Judge Juan Merchan in Manhattan Criminal Court on Friday morning after he was found guilty on all counts at his hush money trial last year – just 10 days before his second inauguration to the presidency.
I spoke with Yglesias, who co-founded Vox, about his indictment of Democratic policymaking, whether moderation actually works, the tensions between increasing e