Senator Ed Markey announced plans to introduce a bill that would extend the deadline for the TikTok ban. Supreme Court seems likely to uphold a federal law that could force TikTok to shut down on Jan.
Sen. Ed Markey said he’s stressed to the Biden administration that “the serious hardship” and "unintended consequences” of a ban must be considered.
U.S. Senator Ed Markey joined several other members of Congress in introducing legislation that would extend the deadline on a ban of social media app TikTok.
WASHINGTON -- Former Long Island congressman Lee Zeldin denied that he will favor industry over the environment and declared he thinks climate change is real as he faced questions Thursday on his nomination to be the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
Every member of the delegation talks about resisting parts of Trump's agenda, but some say there's room for strategic compromise.
Less than a week before TikTok is set to be banned nationwide, Senator Ed Markey announced the introduction of a bill that would extend the deadline by 270 days, his office said in a statement.
Sen. Ed Markey announced last night via press release that he would be proposing a bill to the Senate that would extend TikTok's ban deadline past this Friday. “The stakes here are high," Markey ...
The Biden administration is considering ways to keep TikTok available in the U.S. if the Supreme Court allows a ban to go into effect Sunday.
Mass., discusses his bill to delay the upcoming TikTok ban deadline during a press conference at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/)
Senator Ed Markey’s bill to delay the TikTok ban highlights the platform's $24.2 billion U.S. economic impact and the threat to millions of creators' livelihoods amid national security concerns.
Tech titans including the leaders of Meta, Amazon, Google, Tesla, TikTok, Apple, Alphabet, and OpenAI are set to attend the formal start of Trump's second term.
After a bipartisan bill to remove TikTok from app stores in the U.S. or force its sale passed last year, some officials in Washington now want to delay the ban from going into effect.