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Trump to delay ban on TikTok again

Trump to delay ban on TikTok again

Axios4 hours ago

The youth can rejoice. President Trump will yet again extend the deadline for a ban on TikTok, the White House said Tuesday.
Why it matters: The wildly popular video app lives to fight another day. It's so far outlasted the terms of a bipartisan law that would have banned it over national security risks because of its ties to China.
That legislation passed last year, which was upheld by the Supreme Court, had required that ByteDance divest TikTok by mid-January or else stop operating in the U.S.
Trump has extended the deadline multiple times since he took office in January, most recently until June 19.
Driving the news: Trump will sign an additional executive order this week to keep TikTok up and running for another 90 days, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
"As he has said many times, President Trump does not want TikTok to go dark," she added.
During the extension period, the administration will work "to ensure this deal is closed so that the American people can continue to use TikTok with the assurance that their data is safe and secure," Leavitt, said.
Zoom in: Patience on the Hill has been wearing thin as Trump prepares to delay a ban on TikTok for the third time.
Each time the White House delays enforcement of the TikTok ban, Republicans' national security concerns are undermined, Axios' Maria Curi reports.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) told reporters on Capitol Hill Tuesday that Congress passed the law "so that the Chinese government no longer has the ability to use TikTok to conduct espionage and propaganda."
He added, "It is my hope and expectation that that's exactly what the Trump administration is fighting to achieve. And as long as that happens, I expect Congress will be happy."
Cruz noted, "If it doesn't happen, I expect Congress will be very honest."
Catch up quick: The app briefly went dark in January after ByteDance failed to divest from TikTok.

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Mark Kelly finds a receptive audience to talk about gun violence
Mark Kelly finds a receptive audience to talk about gun violence

Politico

time29 minutes ago

  • Politico

Mark Kelly finds a receptive audience to talk about gun violence

Sen. Mark Kelly tried Tuesday to shift the national conversation to gun safety in an appearance that was notable for its location and its timing. As the nation reels from the latest outbreak of political violence, the senator from Arizona and his wife, former Rep. Gabby Giffords, recalled the horrific attack that tore apart their lives as they addressed an audience in Charleston, South Carolina, on the 10-year anniversary of the mass killing at Mother Emanuel AME church. Kelly and Giffords, who was badly wounded in a 2011 attack in her congressional district, appealed for action to address violence that the former Navy pilot and astronaut said makes the U.S. stand out 'in the worst of ways' among developed nations. 'There are loopholes in our gun laws that you can drive a truck through,' Kelly said during a packed town hall in a state that carries electoral weight because of its early primary — giving the senator's visit an added political dimension. His remarks came during an evening town hall at Charleston's Casper Hall, about two miles from where nine people were gunned down by a white supremacist during a Bible study gathering. 'I, on behalf of me and Gabby, want to express our condolences about what happened a decade ago,' said Kelly, seated on stage with Giffords. The racially motivated shooting is 'something that should not happen in any sanctuary of any religion, anywhere in our country, ever,' he added. The senator went on during the hour-long forum to highlight the nation's seemingly unyielding frequency of gun violence, peppered throughout with friendly questions that allowed him, along with his wife and two state Democratic lawmakers to opine at length about why changing gun laws in a deep red state like South Carolina and federally has been a challenge. At one point Giffords was asked by Christale Spain, the South Carolina Democratic Chair who served as emcee: 'Do you ever want to give up on your work to end gun violence?' 'No way, Jose!' Giffords responded, before adding, 'Don't look back, I hope others are inspired to keep moving forward, no matter what.' The timing of the event comes as the nation's political leaders are on edge following the attack on a pair of Minnesota lawmakers over the weekend. The alleged gunman, identified as Vance Boelter, has been charged with federal and state charges of murder and attempted murder for the killing of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband and critically wounding another lawmaker and his spouse. Authorities say Boelter had a 'hit list' that included nearly four dozen elected officials, all Democrats. The audience at the town hall held a moment of silence for the victims in Minnesota. Kelly is seen as an emerging Democratic with a rising national profile. He suggested the only way out of the U.S. can find its way out of the seemingly endless cycles of gun violence is for both political parties to work together. He noted it happened last Congress when then-President Joe Biden signed into law a measure that modestly strengthened background checks and provided resources to address mental health. 'We can accomplish things. It's just not as much as we would like,' Kelly said, before adding that registering people to vote is key. 'Winning elections is what really, really matters in this fight.' Kelly was under consideration to be Kamala Harris' running mate before she chose Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota. That sparked chatter that he could be a presidential contender down the line. He was first elected to the Senate in a special election in 2020 to serve the remaining remainder of the term of the late Sen. John McCain, the GOP presidential nominee in 2008. Kelly was elected to a full six-year term in 2022, proving his special election win was no fluke and he could hold on to a Democratic seat in a critical swing state, which likely also boosts his appeal for a potential presidential run. While not expressly addressed during the town hall, Kelly also got the opportunity to introduce himself to a key South Carolina voting bloc. Unlike in Arizona, Black voters make up a sizable portion of South Carolina's Democratic primary voters, who could again be a decisive coalition as they did with Joe Biden in the 2020 cycle. South Carolina Democrats have hosted other potential White House hopefuls in recent weeks including Gov. Wes Moore of Maryland,who headlined the party's Blue Palmetto Dinner in late May, and Walz, who delivered the keynote address at the state party convention on June 1. Both talked about leading the party out of the political wilderness, even as uncertainty remains whether South Carolina will hold on to its lead off spot in the party's nominating calendar three years from now. Kelly did not hesitate to name check Charleston's longtime Democratic Rep. James Clyburn, who has earned a reputation as a kingmaker in the state party. Kelly reminded the audience that Clyburn has previously introduced legislation in Congress aiming to close the Charleston Loophole, but has yet to be taken up. One of the final questions Kelly was asked about was what the future looks like for young Americans and what advancements he hopes to create for them on curbing gun violence. 'It's not the kids fault,' he said. 'It's our fault, collectively as a nation. It's the fault of Congress, it's the fault of the South Carolina legislature that we can't get our shit together in a way to do something that clearly makes this society safer for kids.'

Analysts rework Roku stock price targets, rating after Amazon deal
Analysts rework Roku stock price targets, rating after Amazon deal

Miami Herald

time33 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Analysts rework Roku stock price targets, rating after Amazon deal

Hey, what's on TV tonight? The question sounds just so 20th Century, reeking of rabbit ears and Ricky Ricardo in this age of streaming entertainment, where you can watch just about anything you want any time you want. Including "I Love Lucy." Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter The U.S. has more than 200 million connected-TV users, and 88% of American households have a connected-TV device. According to Nielsen, in 2024 streaming surpassed cable and broadcast viewing time for the first time, with more than 40% of all TV-viewing time spent on streaming. With a new era comes new lingo, so this is probably a good time to mention that streaming refers to the delivery of video content over the internet, while CTV describes streaming video content on a television set connected to the internet. And now two very big names in CTV circles - Amazon (AMZN) and Roku (ROKU) - are getting together like Ozzie and Harriet. Amazon's demand-side platform will place ads on top-viewed platforms like the Roku Channel and Amazon Prime Video along with other services available via Roku and Amazon Fire TV operating alliance aims to "enable seamless access to logged-in users across major streaming apps," Kelly MacLean, a vice president at Amazon's ad unit who oversees sales tied to its Amazon DSP, told Variety. The companies said early tests of the technology showed advertisers reaching 40% more unique viewers while they cut back the frequency of a specific ad running in front of the same users by nearly 30%. More Streaming: Walt Disney offers new perks for Disney+ membersBank of America sends strong message on NetflixNetflix has a genius plan to find its next hit show Roku and Amazon estimate their partnership will make available a pool of 80 million connected-TV households in the U.S. The partnership will give rise to "a better experience for marketers, consumers and programmers that are on our platforms," says Jay Askinasi, Roku's senior vice president of global media revenue and growth. "It means more relevant ads, better frequency management from a consumer perspective, more addressability and measurement on our programmer partners," he said. The new service will be available in the U.S. to all advertisers that use Amazon DSP by the fourth quarter of 2025. "Roku has maintained its favorable positioning as it is an agnostic platform allowing it to partner with Amazon, Walmart (WMT) , and many others," Wedbush analysts said in a research note. "This allows Roku to create partnerships that leverage others' data, and the exclusivity between Amazon and Roku in their newly announced partnership does not preclude the latter from continuing its partnerships with Walmart, Shopify, (SHOP) Instacart, and others." As Roku enters the early stages of shoppable ads, Wedbush said, the San Jose, Calif., provider of a streaming-tech platform is establishing itself as a partner to all, "creating a moat as a CTV platform that will further insulate it from competition in the coming years." Wedbush has an outperform rating and $100 price target on Roku. Roku shares are up nearly 50% from a year ago and up 7.8% in 2025. It finished regular trading on June 17 at $80.63, off 1.9%. Several other investment firms issued reports for Roku shares after the deal was announced. Bank of America Global Research raised the firm's price target on Roku to $100 from $85 and affirmed a buy rating after the partnership was unveiled, The Fly reported. Advertisers will have access to the largest authenticated CTV footprint in the U.S. exclusively through Amazon's demand-side platform, B of A said, adding that the expanded partnership is intended to improve performance, planning and measurement for all advertisers. Related: Social media influencers are about to make a lot more money The firm said a key tenet of its bullish thesis is predicated on Roku monetizing its existing inventory through their integrations with demand-side platforms. BofA views this announcement as "another proof point that Roku intends to be more flexible and drive further interoperability within their platform." Citizens JMP analyst Matthew Condon said that the Roku-Amazon deal gives the advertisers within the Seattle tech and e-retail giant's demand-side platform significant reach across Roku and Fire-TV audiences, which can ultimately strengthen Roku's ability to monetize its inventory. The analyst, who reiterated an outperform rating and $95 price target on Roku shares, said he was increasingly confident that the company could sustain mid-teens-percent growth in its platform revenue. Loop Capital analyst Alan Gould upgraded Roku to buy from hold with a price target of $100, up from $80. The analyst cited expectations that the Amazon advertising partnership should begin boosting Roku's financial results starting next year. This development will further strengthen Roku's position as the leading TV operating system in the U.S., Gould said. The analyst noted that the partnership would integrate Roku and Amazon's logged-in connected-TV user bases, representing an estimated 80 million households, through the Amazon demand-side platform. Roku contributes what Gould called its industry-leading user base while Amazon "brings its unmatched shopping feedback loop." Related: Fund-management veteran skips emotion in investment strategy The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.

Inside the clashes between Trump and Gabbard
Inside the clashes between Trump and Gabbard

Politico

time38 minutes ago

  • Politico

Inside the clashes between Trump and Gabbard

As President Donald Trump privately mulled joining Israel's campaign against Iran this month, one member of his Cabinet sent what he viewed as an audacious attempt to steer him in the opposite direction. At 5:30 a.m. on June 10, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard tweeted a cryptic, three-minute video warning that 'political elite and warmongers' are 'carelessly fomenting fear and tensions between nuclear powers' — and that the world is 'on the brink of nuclear annihilation.' Trump saw the unauthorized video and became incensed, complaining to associates at the White House that she had spoken out of turn, according to three people familiar with the episode — two of them inside the administration and all granted anonymity to describe sensitive dynamics. Her post came a few days after Israel hawks met with Trump at the White House to lobby him to support Israel's attacks on Iran. In the eyes of Trump and some close to him, Gabbard was warning him not to greenlight Israel attacking Iran. Trump even expressed his disapproval to her personally, the three people said. 'I don't think he dislikes Tulsi as a person … But certainly the video made him not super hot on her … and he doesn't like it when people are off message,' said one of the people, a senior administration official. The official added that Trump also doesn't appreciate it when people appear to be correcting him and that 'many took that video as trying to correct the administration's position.' Trump's reaction to the video — which has not been previously reported — underscores a widening gap between a president on the brink of potentially joining Israel's war, and his anti-interventionist intelligence chief, who in the past has been adamantly against the U.S. engaging in new foreign conflicts. Indeed, the man Gabbard endorsed on the campaign trail — who spoke of ending the Ukraine-Russia War on Day 1 and ushering in a new era of peace — is striking a different tone from her now that he's sitting behind the Resolute desk. Those tensions came to the forefront early Tuesday when a reporter aboard Air Force One asked Trump about Gabbard's declaration before Congress in March that Iran was not seeking to build a nuclear weapon. Trump appeared to dismiss her assessment. 'I don't care what she said,' Trump replied. 'I think they were very close to having a weapon.' It's a remarkable change in tone from the way the president once talked about the former Democratic representative from Hawaii-turned-Trump supporter. Last fall, Trump touted Gabbard's backing on the campaign trail. He added her — as well as Robert F. Kennedy — to his Cabinet in part to highlight the ideological diversityof the MAGA coalition. But in recent months, Trump has increasingly mused about nixing Gabbard's office completely, an idea he floated when he gave her the job. In the White House there have been discussions about folding its mandate into the CIA or another agency, according to one of the people familiar with his response to the video and two others familiar with the matter — though it's unclear what that would mean for Gabbard. The Director of National Intelligence serves as the president's principal intelligence adviser and oversees the sprawling U.S. spy community. Gabbard's tweet about nuclear war may have spurred those conversations along. Citing a recent trip to Hiroshima, Japan — where she visited the blast site from one of the two atomic bombs the U.S. dropped to end World War II — the DNI warned in graphic terms of weapons potentially 'vaporizing entire cities.' Her statements were in keeping with the sentiment of many MAGA leaders that deeper U.S. involvement in the Israel-Iran clashes could pull America into a regional and even worldwide conflict. But ever since then there's been simmering frustration with Gabbard in the West Wing. The president, after all, notably called former President Barack Obama 'pathetic' in 2016 for visiting Hiroshima, and argued that people shouldn't apologize for anything the U.S. did during WWII. And Trump has 'just been kind of down on her in general,' said one of the people familiar with Gabbard's interactions with the White House, adding that Trump thinks she 'doesn't add anything to any conversation.' Gabbard insisted to reporters Tuesday that she and the president are 'on the same page' on Iran, and a person close to Gabbard denied any tensions between her and the president. As recently as Tuesday, the two were meeting with other top officials in the Situation Room at the White House, and the administration even changed the time of the briefing to accommodate her schedule to ensure she could attend, the person said. The Gabbard ally added that she is fully on board with what Trump is trying to do with Iran, and said she has never let her personal views color the advice she provides to the president — nor has she tried to sway Trump to her own point of view. Asked for comment, White House spokesperson Steven Cheung said the president 'has full confidence in his entire exceptional national security team' and insisted that 'efforts by the legacy media to sow internal division are a distraction that will not work.' Vice President JD Vance's team also reached out unprompted Tuesday night to defend Gabbard in a statement, arguing that she is 'an essential member' of the team. 'Tulsi Gabbard is a veteran, a patriot, a loyal supporter of President Trump, and a critical part of the coalition he built in 2024,' he said in a statement. Gabbard argued to reporters on Tuesday that what Trump said about Iran's nuclear program is consistent with her March testimony before Congress. Gabbard said then that even as the intelligence community assessed that Tehran hadn't reinvigorated its nuclear weapons program — findings consistent with assessments shared by senior officials during the Biden administration — Iran's stockpiles of enriched uranium were at their highest levels. 'President Trump was saying the same thing that I said in my annual threat assessment back in March; unfortunately too many people in the media don't care to actually read what I said,' she said. Trump's comments on Air Force One, however, suggest it's not just the media who didn't catch that nuance. The apparent divide has been a source of gossip among people on both sides of the ideological spectrum who are closely following the rising tensions in the Middle East. Israel hawks like conservative talk show host Mark Levin have mocked Gabbard's assessment, suggesting that U.S. intelligence under her leadership has been flat-out incorrect. Some of Gabbard's detractors are now holding up Trump's words to argue that she should get the axe. 'She shouldn't be in that job,' Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton, who had his own falling out with Trump, said Tuesday. Video of Trump's comments about Gabbard on Air Force One have also stirred speculation on Capitol Hill that he has lost trust in her, said one senior congressional aide. Lawmakers of both parties were sharing the video widely among themselves on Tuesday morning, said the aide, who was granted anonymity to share details of private conversations. 'This is not just the hawkish camp,' the person said. 'This is every single member sending it around.' Even people who agree with Gabbard have been worried about her influence waning: On his podcast War Room on Monday, MAGA ringleader Steve Bannon rhetorically asked his guest Tucker Carlson why Gabbard was not invited to what appears to have been a critical Camp David huddle earlier this month, where Trump and senior officials from his CIA director to chief of staff and the vice president discussed how to posture amid Israeli's looming strike. 'You know why … This is a regime change effort,' Carlson answered. Gabbard — who has spoken of losing friends while serving in the military — has in the past been extremely outspoken against such incursions. The former lawmaker has long been 'focused on not getting ourselves into another horrible war we can't succeed in or get our way out of,' said Daniel Davis, a senior fellow at the think-tank Defense Priorities, whom Gabbard tapped to serve in a top job at ODNI but whose appointment was axed following an uproar about his past criticism of Israel's conduct in Gaza. Gabbard's defenders have pushed back on suggestions that she's getting iced out. The intelligence chief, who is a Lt. Col. in the U.S. Army National Guard, was on Army Reserve duty the weekend of the Camp David huddle, according to one person familiar with the matter. The Gabbard ally also said that she has been in the room with the president and vice president throughout deliberations on the Israel-Iran issue, working out of the White House rather than ODNI's office since Israel first started its bombing campaign. Trump, instructed her to reach out to her Israeli counterpart and the Gulf States to be in touch. Gabbard isn't without allies in the administration. Even as she's been savaged by Republicans eager for Trump to enter the fighting fray, Vance took it upon himself to defend her on X on Tuesday afternoon. But what matters, of course, is how Trump himself views her. And while Gabbard is indeed still around the White House, the senior administration official remarked that 'just because you're here doesn't mean that you're doing a great job.' Trump's original decision to nominate Gabbard to serve as his spy chief sparked widespread concern among national security officials and Democrats — and even some hawkish Republicans privately — on Capitol Hill. She has flirted with fringe ideas about the wars in Ukraine and Syria, and has evinced a deep skepticism of the intelligence community she now oversees. After she was confirmed in February, Gabbard carved out an unusually public role for a spy chief, eagerly carrying out the president's agenda and letting the world know about her work for Trump in regular appearances on Fox News and in social media posts and interviews with right-wing media stars. She revoked the security clearances of dozens of the president's political enemies and critics, maligned some of the officials that work beneath her and fired two top officials who oversaw the production of an intelligence assessment that undercut Trump's justification for the mass deportation of migrants from Latin America. But there were signs that she may be on her own path, according to some in the administration. For one, her very visit to Hiroshima perplexed the White House, according to one of the aforementioned administration officials. The intelligence chief appears to have tacked on a trip to the city as she paid a visit to a Marine Corps air station in Iwakuni, close to Hiroshima, after attending the Shangri-La dialogue in Singapore. But the White House has questioned whether the trip was relevant to her role as Director of National Intelligence, even as the Gabbard ally said the Japan trip was coordinated and approved by the NSC. As Gabbard navigates the politics of Trump's White House, she may also be thinking ahead to what might come next. In a recent podcast interview with former Fox News host Megyn Kelly in May, Gabbard didn't rule out running for president in 2028. 'I will never rule out any opportunity to serve my country,' Gabbard said. If Trump decides to join Israel in attacking Iran, that could complicate her calculus of serving in the administration. Jack Detsch contributed to this report.

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