Trump Delays Sale Of TikTok For Third Time

Breaking News Featured

In Summary

  • Trump believes a deal to sell TikTok will eventually materialize and Xi Jinping will ultimately sign off on it
  • Trump signed a second executive order extending the deadline again in April
  • China was prepared to sign off on a TikTok deal but pulled back after Trump unveiled the tariffs in April


Catenaa, Tuesday, June 17, 2025- US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he’ll likely extend the deadline for China-based ByteDance to sell off TikTok before it’s set to go dark on Thursday.

Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Trump said that he believes a deal to sell TikTok will eventually materialize and that Chinese President Xi Jinping will ultimately sign off on it.

This will be the third time Trump has extended the TikTok sales deadline. The app briefly went offline in January just before Trump took office, before he pushed the date to April as negotiations around a sale continued to drag on.

He signed a second executive order extending the deadline again in April, but that expires Thursday.

Trump initially called for a ban on TikTok during his first term in office, but changed his stance during the 2024 election, saying that it serves as a bulwark against Meta’s social media dominance. 

Trump, however, had a change of heart on the app after crediting it with drawing young voters to his reelection effort. He went on to invite the company’s CEO, Shou Zi Chew, to his inauguration alongside other tech leaders, including Apple CEO Tim Cook, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and Zuckerberg.

Congress initially passed and former President Joe Biden signed the law banning TikTok in 2024. The legislation calls for TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, to divest itself of the social network. If it doesn’t, US cloud providers and app stores are required to stop hosting the service or face steep fines.

US officials have for years argued that the Chinese government could use TikTok to spread propaganda or gather information on US users, which it could then use to blackmail them in the future. Officials haven’t publicly shared evidence of the danger.

According to the Associated Press, China was prepared to sign off on a TikTok deal but pulled back after Trump unveiled the tariffs in April. Trump has said any sale would likely come after the two countries reach some kind of trade agreement.

Protected by Copyscape