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TikTok Attacks Trump Ban as Irrational Amid Talks on Stake Sale

The prohibition, which is set to begin at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time, would remove TikTok from the app stores.

TikTok Attacks Trump Ban as Irrational Amid Talks on Stake Sale
The TikTok logo is displayed in the app store in view of a video feed of U.S. President Donald Trump in London, U.K. (Photographer: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg)

A lawyer for TikTok told a federal judge that President Donald Trump’s impending ban on the video-sharing app is irrational given that its Chinese owner is in talks to strike a deal the president himself has demanded.

“How does it make sense to impose this app-store ban tonight when there are negotiations underway that might make it unnecessary?” attorney John Hall asked at an unusual Sunday morning hearing on TikTok’s request to temporarily block the ban.

The prohibition, which is set to begin at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time, would remove TikTok from the app stores run by Apple Inc. and Google’s Android, the most widely used marketplaces for downloadable apps. People who don’t yet have the app wouldn’t be able to get it, and those who already have it wouldn’t have access to updates needed to ensure its safe and smooth operation. TikTok is used regularly by 19 million Americans.

The app’s owner, ByteDance Ltd., is fighting the Trump administration in court even as it pursues its approval for the sale of a stake in its U.S. operations to Oracle Corp. and Walmart Inc. under pressure from the president. Trump has called for bans on both TikTok and WeChat, owned by China’s Tencent Holdings Ltd., arguing that the apps could give China’s government access to millions of Americans’ personal data.

The bans are part of an increasingly hard line the president has taken on Beijing as the election approaches.

At Sunday’s virtual hearing, Hall said banning TikTok from U.S. app stores would undermine security by preventing existing users from receiving weekly security updates. He argued that the government has less burdensome alternatives, such as the stake sale, to achieve its national-security aims.

“If that prohibition goes into effect at midnight tonight, the consequences immediately are grave,” Hall told U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols in Washington. “It would be no different than the government locking the doors to a public forum, roping off that town square.”

His language echoed the ruling of a judge in California who put a hold on Trump’s WeChat ban last week.

Daniel Schwei, a lawyer for the Justice Department, countered that “the concern here is about data security risk and leaving data vulnerable to the Chinese government. It is a threat today, it is a risk today, and therefore it deserves to be addressed today.”

TikTok is “challenging a national security determination by the president as well as the judgment of the secretary of commerce about what’s necessary to mitigate those national security harms,” he said. “And I think the court owes significant deference to that.”

The judge gave little indication of whether he was leaning one way or the other as he questioned the lawyers. Nichols said he planned to issue a ruling “sometime later today but before 11:59 p.m.”

He said his order would be public but that he planned to keep the opinion explaining it under seal until a redacted version goes out on Monday. The U.S. filed papers under seal on Friday, saying they contained “confidential business information” about the app that ByteDance has shared with the Commerce Department.

The case is TikTok Inc. v. Trump, 20-cv-2658, U.S. District Court, District of Columbia (Washington).

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.