Trump says Microsoft is one of the companies eyeing TikTok
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[January 28, 2025] By
WILL WEISSERT and HALELUYA HADERO
President Donald Trump said Monday evening that Microsoft is among the
U.S. companies looking to take control of TikTok to help the popular app
avert an effective ban that could kick-in in April.
“I would say yes,” Trump told reporters when asked if Microsoft was one
of the companies interested in helping to bring about a new ownership of
TikTok, a requirement set by Congress to keep the app functioning in the
U.S.
Trump added that other companies were also interested in purchasing
TikTok, but wouldn’t provide a list.
“I like bidding wars because you make your best deals,” Trump said as he
spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One while flying back to Washington
from Miami, where Republican House members were holding a conference.
Microsoft declined to comment. Representatives for TikTok did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
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In one of his first acts in office last week, Trump extended the
deadline for TikTok to find new ownership that satisfies the government
by 75 days, to April 4 from January 19.
The president has said that he’s looking for the ultimate purchaser to
give the U.S. a 50% stake in the company, which is owned by China-based
ByteDance. But the details remain murky, and its unclear whether he's
proposing control of the app by the government or another U.S. entity.
Last week, the artificial intelligence startup Perplexity AI presented a
new proposal to ByteDance that would allow the U.S. government to own up
to 50% of a new entity that merges Perplexity with TikTok’s U.S.
business, according to a person familiar with the matter.
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A TikTok logo is shown on a phone in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 17,
2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
 Several other investors — including
billionaire Frank McCourt and Trump's former Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin — have spoken publicly about their desire to purchase
TikTok's U.S. platform. Trump has also said he’s spoken to “many
people” privately about the company.
After the bipartisan law was signed by former President Joe Biden in
April, ByteDance said it did not have plans to sell the platform and
fought the statute in court for months. China also rebuked
Washington over the divestment push, though more recently it appears
to be softening its stance.
In media interviews last week, Bill Ford, the chairman of the global
investing firm General Atlantic and a ByteDance board member, said
the company is prepared to engage with the Trump administration and
Chinese officials to find a solution that keeps TikTok available. He
also floated the idea that there could be a solution short of a full
divesture by ByteDance.
Lawmakers and officials in both parties have raised national
security concerns about Chinese ownership and potential manipulation
on the immensely popular platform, which is used by more than 170
million U.S. users.
Trump was in favor of a TikTok ban before he reversed his position
last year. He credits the platform with helping him win more young
voters during the recent presidential election.
Microsoft, along with Walmart, made a failed bid for TikTok during
Trump’s first term after Trump tried to ban the app. Microsoft CEO
Satya Nadella later described it as the “strangest thing I’ve ever
worked on.”
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