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TikTok denied emergency request to stop ban from taking result


The federal appeals court that last week rejected TikTok’s attempt to overthrow its pending ban denied the corporation’s request Friday that sought to pause the ruling and the Jan. 19 deadline for a sale.

The corporation, which has been forced by a federal law to sell to a recent owner or be banned in the U.S., requested the emergency pause earlier in the week arguing it would afford the Supreme Court period to determine whether it should review the law.

However, the D.C. Circuit judges said that Congress made a “deliberate selection” to set a 270-day period frame for the sale-or-ban, “subject to one (and only one) extension.”

The TikTok logo is displayed on a phone screen, Nov. 30, 2024.
Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

“The petitioners have not identified any case in which a court, after rejecting a constitutional test to an Act of Congress, has enjoined the Act from going into result while review is sought in the Supreme Court,” the judges wrote in the unsigned order.

TikTok has not immediately commented about the order.

The fairness Department asked the court to decline TikTok’s request for a temporary injunction.

“The Court is familiar with the relevant facts and law and has definitively rejected petitioners’ constitutional claims in a thorough selection that recognizes the critical national-safety interests underlying the Act,” the DOJ’s attorneys said.

The fairness Department did not immediately comment on the selection either.

The case would have to leave to the Supreme Court if TikTok chooses to appeal, which could delay the Jan. 19 deadline.

President Joe Biden signed the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, which was part of a massive, $95 billion foreign aid package passed by Congress, on April 24.

As part of the act, TikTok, which has over 170 million U.S. users, is forced to sell the corporation from its current Chinese-based owner ByteDance.

The president and some congressional leaders have argued that the ultimatum against TikTok was essential because of safety concerns about ByteDance and its connections to the Chinese government.

Participants hold signs in back of TikTok outside the Capitol Building, March 13, 2024, in Washington, D.C.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

ByteDance rebutted those allegations in its lawsuit, arguing there has been no tangible evidence that the app poses any safety uncertainty and filed a lawsuit against the fairness Department in May.

The law has prompted major protests from TikTok’s American users who have defended the app.

President-elect Donald Trump once proposed a TikTok ban when he was in office but has changed his stance and signaled he would reverse the ban once in office. A reversal, however, would require approval from both houses of Congress.



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