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14 minutes ago
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Trump Will Delay Enforcing TikTok Ban for a Third Time, White House Says
Under a U.S. law that went into effect Jan. 19, 2025, it is illegal for American companies to host or distribute TikTok in the country as long as it remains controlled by its Chinese owner, ByteDance. The legislation passed last year with overwhelming bipartisan support, on fears that the popular video entertainment app's ties to China's communist regime make it a national security risk. The Supreme Court rejected a challenge to the ban. But since taking office, President Donald Trump has issued two executive orders delaying enforcement of the law, and now he's going to give TikTok — which has said it has more than 170 million U.S. users — yet another stay of execution. More from Variety Trump's $499 Gold Smartphone Is Probably Being Made in China, According to Experts Trump Mobile: President's Company Unveils Wireless Service Delivered via AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile, Plans to Launch a U.S.-Made 'Sleek, Gold' Android Smartphone Shakira Says Being an Immigrant in the United States Means 'Living in Constant Fear': 'The Treatment of All People Must Always Be Humane' On Tuesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump will sign an additional executive order this week 'to keep TikTok up and running.' The new deadline to reach a deal that would keep TikTok legal is now mid-September. 'As he has said many times, President Trump does not want TikTok to go dark,' Leavitt said in a statement (via CBS News). 'This extension will last 90 days, which the Administration will spend working to ensure this deal is closed so that the American people can continue to use TikTok with the assurance that their data is safe and secure.' Earlier Tuesday, Trump told reporters on Air Force One that a TikTok deal would probably require approval by China's government and he said, 'I think President Xi will ultimately approve it, yes.' Asked whether he has the legal authority to extend the deadline yet again, Trump claimed, 'Yes, I do.' Under the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, ByteDance is required to sell a controlling interest in TikTok to non-Chinese owners or be outlawed. The law does not permit Trump to postpone enforcement of the law. But he has done so anyway, as his administration tries to figure out a new structure for TikTok in the U.S. that would comply with the law. The Trump administration reportedly proposed spinning off TikTok's U.S. business into a new company majority-owned by U.S. investors, with ByteDance retaining a stake of less than 20% to comply with the law. Potential investors in TikTok could include Oracle, Blackstone and venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, which have been reported to be part of the deal talks. Oracle is seen as a logical partner, as the company has an existing agreement to host TikTok's U.S. user data. But the deal evidently fell apart amid rising tensions between the U.S. and China over Trump's move to impose steep tariffs on Chinese goods. In April, prior to Trump's previous deadline, ByteDance said that it was in discussions with U.S. government officials 'regarding a potential solution for TikTok U.S.' but that an agreement was not finalized because 'there are key matters to be resolved.' ByteDance also said any agreement would be subject to approval under Chinese law. After TikTok lost an appeal to the Supreme Court challenging the divest-or-ban law on First Amendment grounds, the app briefly shut down in the U.S. on Jan. 18. But less than 12 hours later, TikTok restored service — citing Trump's pledge to not enforce the ban while he sought to find a solution. Meanwhile, Apple and Google pulled TikTok from their U.S. app stores amid legal uncertainty over Trump's executive order delaying enforcement of the TikTok-targeted law, but restored TikTok in February after assurances from the White House they would not be held criminally liable for doing so. Trump, during his first term as U.S. president, tried to ban TikTok on national-security grounds but those efforts were shot down by federal courts. Trump joined TikTok in June 2024 during his presidential campaign. At a press conference in December, Trump said, 'I have a warm spot in my heart for TikTok' because the app helped drive support for him among young voters. ByteDance has said 60% of its ownership is represented by 'global institutional investors' including BlackRock, General Atlantic and Susquehanna, with 20% owned by its Chinese founders and 20% by employees including those in the U.S. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
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Trump Says David Ellison Is ‘Great, He'll Do a Great Job' Running Merged Skydance-Paramount, as FCC Deal Approval Is Still Pending
President Trump praised David Ellison, CEO of Skydance Media, as 'great' and said that 'he'll do a great job' as head of the merged Skydance-Paramount Global — but his administration has yet to approve the deal. Speaking with reporters outside the White House Wednesday morning, Trump did not directly answer a question about what is holding up the FCC from granting regulatory approval of the proposed Skydance-Paramount deal, which was reached in July 2024. But the president immediately began discussing his $20 billion lawsuit against CBS over a '60 Minutes' interview with then-VP Kamala Harris. More from Variety Mark Ruffalo Slams 'Grifter' Trump and Says 'Billionaires Are the Problem, Not Immigrants': They're 'Stealing You Blind' While 'Immigrants Add to the Economy' Trump Will Delay Enforcing TikTok Ban for a Third Time, White House Says Trump's $499 Gold Smartphone Is Probably Being Made in China, According to Experts Trump filed the lawsuit against CBS just days before the 2024 presidential election, alleging that a '60 Minutes' interview with Harris violated a Texas consumer protection law by misleading voters and causing Trump personal financial harm. On Wednesday, Trump said that Harris' answer — to a question about the Biden administration's relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu — was 'horrendous' and 'election-threatening, it was so incompetent. So they took the entire answer out, and they took another answer to another question and put it in.' Trump asked rhetorically, 'You think they'd do that for me?' The reporter he was speaking with responded, 'I think it happens daily,' to which Trump said, 'Well, I've never seen it. I thought I've seen everything, that I've never seen.' In March, Paramount filed a motion to dismiss Trump's suit, which the company said is 'an affront to the First Amendment' that is 'without basis in law or fact.' But since then, lawyers for Paramount and Trump have entered into settlement talks. In a filing last Friday, attorneys for both parties said the two sides are 'engaged in active settlement discussions, including continued mediation.' Paramount offered $15 million to settle the lawsuit but that was rejected by Trump's team, which wants at least $25 million as well as an apology from CBS, the Wall Street Journal reported. Shari Redstone, the controlling shareholder of Paramount Global, is said to support the company's attempts to resolve the '60 Minutes' suit through mediation. If the deal is approved, Ellison would become chairman and CEO of the new 'Paramount Skydance Corp.' The FCC is reviewing the transaction and must approve the transfer of CBS broadcast licenses to the new ownership to finalize the deal. Trump lawsuit's centers on an exchange in which '60 Minutes' correspondent Bill Whitaker asked Harris about the Biden administration's relations with Netanyahu, whom Whitaker said 'is not listening' to the White House. CBS News broadcast a longer portion of Harris's response on Oct. 6 on 'Face the Nation,' whereas the edited '60 Minutes' segment broadcast the next day included a shorter excerpt from the same answer. 'Each excerpt reflects the substance of the vice president's answer,' CBS News said in a statement. In response to an FCC request, CBS News released an unedited transcript of the '60 Minutes' interview with Harris that aired Oct. 6, 2024 (available at this link) and said the materials show that 'consistent with 60 Minutes' repeated assurances to the public,' the broadcast 'was not doctored or deceitful.' In his comments Wednesday, Trump also said that in the wake of his lawsuit, 'the head of '60 Minutes' got fired, the head of CBS [News] got fired, they're all getting fired.' He claimed CBS is 'very embarrassed' by the episode. On April 22, '60 Minutes' executive producer Bill Owens resigned, saying interference from Paramount execs prevented him from making 'independent decisions based on what was right for '60 Minutes,' right for the audience.' On May 19, CBS News president Wendy McMahon announced her resignation, writing in a memo to staff, 'It's become clear that the company and I do not agree on the path forward.' Meanwhile, David Ellison met with Trump at two recent UFC events (on April 12 and June 7), which the Skydance CEO failed to disclose in violation of FCC ex parte rules, according to an FCC filing by tech company (which claims it made 'a superior bid' over Skydance to acquire National Amusements Inc. and Paramount and is opposing the Skydance-Paramount deal). At the June 7 UFC fight, Trump and Ellison engaged in 'a heated exchange which required White House and UFC officials to intervene' before the encounter concluded 'with a firm handshake,' according to the filing, citing video recorded at the event. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar

15 minutes ago
Wartime NATO summits have focused on Ukraine. With Trump, this one will be different
BRUSSELS -- At its first summits after Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, NATO gave President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pride of place at its table. It won't be the same this time. Europe's biggest land conflict since World War II is now in its fourth year and still poses an existential threat to the continent. Ukraine continues to fight a war so that Europeans don't have to. Just last week, Russia launched one of the biggest drone attacks of the invasion on Kyiv. But things have changed. The Trump administration insists that it must preserve maneuvering space to entice Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table, so Ukraine must not be allowed steal the limelight. In Washington last year, the military alliance's weighty summit communique included a vow to supply long-term security assistance to Ukraine, and a commitment to back the country 'on its irreversible path" to NATO membership. The year before, a statement more than twice as long was published in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius. A new NATO-Ukraine Council was set up, and Kyiv's membership path fast-tracked. Zelenskyy received a hero's welcome at a concert downtown. It will be very different at a two-day summit in the Netherlands that starts Tuesday. NATO's most powerful member, the United States, is vetoing Ukraine's membership. It's unclear how long for. Zelenskyy is invited again, but will not be seated at NATO's table. The summit statement is likely to run to around five paragraphs, on a single page, NATO diplomats and experts say. Ukraine will only get a passing mention. Recent developments do not augur well for Ukraine. Earlier this month, frustrated by the lack of a ceasefire agreement, U.S. President Donald Trump said it might be best to let Ukraine and Russia 'fight for a while' before pulling them apart and pursuing peace. Last weekend, he and Putin spoke by phone, mostly about Israel and Iran, but a little about Ukraine, too, Trump said. America has warned its allies that it has other security priorities, including in the Indo-Pacific and on its own borders. Then at the Group of Seven summit in Canada, Trump called for Russia to be allowed back into the group; a move that would rehabilitate Putin on the global stage. The next day, Russia launched its mass drone attack on Kyiv. Putin 'is doing this simply because he can afford to continue the war. He wants the war to go on. It is troubling when the powerful of this world turn a blind eye to it,' Zelenskyy said. Trump left the G7 gathering early to focus on the conflict between Israel and Iran. Zelenskyy had traveled to Canada to meet with him. No meeting happened, and no statement on Russia or the war was agreed. Lacking unanimity, other leaders met with Zelenskyy to reassure him of their support. Trump wants to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. He said he could do it within 100 days, but that target has come and gone. Things are not going well, as a very public bust up with Zelenskyy at the White House demonstrated. Trump froze military aid and intelligence sharing with Ukraine's armed forces for a week. The U.S. has stepped back from the Ukraine Defense Contact Group that was set up under the Biden administration and helped to drum up weapons and ammunition. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth skipped its last meeting; the first time a Pentagon chief has been absent since Russian forces invaded in February 2022. Addressing Congress on June 10, Hegseth also acknowledged that funding for Ukraine military assistance, which has been robust for the past two years, will be reduced in the upcoming defense budget. It means Kyiv will receive fewer of the weapons systems that have been key to countering Russia's attack. Indeed, no new aid packages have been approved for Ukraine since Trump took office again in January. 'The message from the administration is clear: Far from guaranteed, future U.S. support for Ukraine may be in jeopardy,' said Riley McCabe, Associate Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a U.S.-based policy research organization. Cutting aid, McCabe warned, could make the Kremlin believe 'that U.S. resolve is fleeting, and that time is on Russia's side.' 'Putin has less incentive to negotiate if he believes that U.S. disengagement is inevitable and that Russia will soon gain an advantage on the battlefield,' he said. Trump wants the summit to focus on defense spending. The 32 allies are expected to agree on an investment pledge that should meet his demands. Still, the Europeans and Canada are determined to keep a spotlight on the war, wary that Russia could set its sights on one of them next. They back Trump's ceasefire efforts with Putin but also worry that the two men are cozying up. Also, some governments may struggle to convince their citizens of the need to boost defense spending at the expense of other budget demands without a strong show of support for Ukraine — and acknowledgement that Russia remains NATO's biggest security threat. The summit is highly symbolic for Ukraine in other ways. Zelenskyy wants to prevent his country from being sidelined from international diplomacy, but both he and his allies rely on Trump for U.S. military backup against Russia. Concretely, Trump and his counterparts will dine with the Dutch King on Tuesday evening. Zelenskyy could take part. Elsewhere, foreign ministers will hold a NATO-Ukraine Council, the forum where Kyiv sits among the 32 allies as an equal to discuss its security concerns and needs. What is clear is that the summit will be short. One working session on Wednesday. It was set up that way to prevent the meeting from derailing. If the G7 is anything to go by, Trump's focus on his new security priorities — right now, the conflict between Israel and Iran — might make it even shorter.