With just minutes left as president, Joe Biden on Monday pardoned his entire immediate family—and gave clemency to prominent Native American activist Leonard Peltier.
President Joe Biden shared a tidbit of one of his conversations with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu regarding the war on Palestine, though the revelation didn’t leave either country in a particularly good light.
Some U.S. lawmakers are advocating for an extension on the deadline for TikTok's Beijing parent company to sell U.S. assets before a ban takes effect.
Also in today’s newsletter, Trump warns Putin to reach Ukraine ‘deal’ soon, and Pakistan to seek extradition of billionaire tycoon from UAE
President Joe Biden's administration said it will be up to President-elect Donald Trump to implement the ban on TikTok, which is set to take effect in two days after the Supreme Court upheld the law Friday.
A ban on the popular app is set to start Sunday, although the Supreme Court could rule anytime on whether to uphold it.
The Biden administration doesn't plan to take action that forces TikTok to immediately go dark for U.S. users on Sunday, an administration official told ABC News.
Congress last year in a law signed by President Joe Biden required that TikTok’s China-based parent company ByteDance divest the company by Jan. 19 or risk getting banned in the U.S.
China-based parent company ByteDance is set to reach an agreement to keep TikTok accessible in the United States. At the same time, there may be other solutions besides the sale of assets, stated General Atlantic CEO Bill Ford,
Wednesday's Forbes Daily covers a historic winter storm in the South, how much Trump really gained from crypto, a struggling real estate mogul and more.
TikTok has gone dark in the U.S., the result of a federal law that bans the popular social media app for millions of Americans.