Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), chair of the Home Judiciary Committee, mentioned on Sunday {that a} change within the regulation can be essential to hold TikTok on-line if ByteDance doesn’t promote the video app to an entity not affiliated with the Chinese language Communist Celebration.
“It seems to me, if you’re going to do something short of someone else purchasing TikTok and ByteDance no longer owning it, you’re going to have to have a change in the law. And if that’s what’s warranted, then I think the Congress will look at that with the leadership from President Trump,” Jordan mentioned in an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union” with Dana Bash.
“But we’re fortunate that President Trump is committed to working with us to find a solution,” he mentioned. “So, I think everyone thinks this is going to get solved, because you have the guy coming in tomorrow into the White House, who knows how to get deals done, knows how to get things solved. So, I’m confident in that.”
Jordan mentioned he is comfy with a 90-day extension, which is allowed as a part of a bipartisan invoice handed by Congress final April. The invoice gave TikTok’s Chinese language dad or mum firm, ByteDance, 270 days to divest from the app or face a ban from U.S. app shops.
“What we want is we don’t want China spying on Americans. We don’t want China influencing young people and the 170 million people who are involved in this app. So that’s what we want,” he mentioned, when requested what he wish to see occur.
“How that gets resolved I guess we’re open, open to different scenarios,” he continued. “But right now, the law is the law, and of course, you get these companies abiding by the law of it. They don’t want the liability concern they would have if they had left this app to continue.”