Trump gives TikTok 45 days to sell U.S. operations
After a few days of indecision, President Trump has settled on an ultimatum for TikTok: Either sell your U.S. operations to an American company in 45 days, or be banned. Microsoft is in negotiations to buy it, but there are many uncertainties.
The Trump administration first began intimating that it might ban TikTok, because of its Chinese ownership, nearly a month ago. By the end of last week, with a national security review by the Treasury Department looming, it was revealed that Microsoft was in negotiations to buy TikTok.
President Trump upped the dramaย by saying different things on consecutive days:
- โAs far as TikTok is concerned weโre banning them from the United States,โ Trump said on August 1, catching Microsoft and TikTok by surprise and causing them to pause negotiations, the Wall Street Journal reported.
- But then, โfollowing a discussion between Trump and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, the Redmond, Washington-based company said in a statement on Sundayย [August 2] that it would continue negotiations to acquire TikTok from ByteDance, and that it aimed to reach a deal by September 15,โ per Reuters. The September 15 deadline was set by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), Reuters adds.
- Today, Trump confirmed that โTikTok would shut down on September 15 unless Microsoft or another company purchased it,โ and โadded that the U.S. Treasury Department would need to receive a lot of money in return for the deal, without explaining how that would work,โ the New York Times reports.
Our takeaway: As John Sakellariadis writes on The China Project: โUnder Trump, the U.S. seems set to tell China it was right to distrust foreign-owned social media apps.โ
What happens next?
TikTok and Microsoft still need to hash out many details, and there are many uncertainties:
- ByteDance has given up on a minority stakeย in TikTok, Reuters reports, but management in Beijing might prefer for the app to โbecome totally independentโ rather than owned by Microsoft, according to the South China Morning Post.
- A nationalist backlash against ByteDance CEOย Zhฤng Yฤซmรญng ๅผ ไธ้ธฃ for not fighting harder against CFIUS has been brewing. The Chinese Foreign Ministry today urged the Trump administration to โstop abusing the concept of national security and stop pursuing policies of discrimination and exclusion,โ per the WSJ.
- White House adviser Peter Navarro is raising concerns about Microsoftย on CNN, suggesting that the American company โcould divest its Chinese holdingsโ to make the CFIUS review process smoother.
- TikTok might soon set up a London headquarters, according to the Sun newspaper, per Reuters.
Whatโs unlikely to happen: Another Huawei-sized fight over technology between the U.S. and China. โByteDance is not another Huawei and Beijing is unlikely to defend the company, said Chinese tech industry players,โ Yuan Yang reports for the Financial Times.
What to watch for: More Chinese apps in the crosshairs. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo singled out WeChat in a recent interview, per the SCMP, and said that โthere are countless more.โ (Fact check: There really arenโt many other Chinese apps that have large user bases in the U.S.)
More to read:
- How TikTokโs owner tried, and failed, to cross the U.S.-China divideย / NYT (porous paywall)
- TikTok faces Australian security investigation as Donald Trump threatens U.S. banย / SCMP
- TikTok parent ByteDance accuses Facebook of ‘plagiarism and smear’ as it goes on the front footย / CNBC
-
TikTok: Logs, logs, logs.ย / by Baptiste Robert on Medium
An analysis of the code of the TikTok app, which concludes, โAs far as we can see, in its current state, TikTok doesnโt have suspicious behavior and is not exfiltrating unusual data.โ