S-153-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
What it does
This bill would repeal the law that prohibits app stores, web hosts, and other distribution services from carrying TikTok and other applications controlled by companies from designated foreign adversary countries (China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran). It would also nullify any existing presidential designations of specific apps as "foreign adversary controlled applications." If enacted, TikTok and any similarly designated apps would be legally permitted to operate and be distributed in the United States without a divestiture requirement.
Who benefits
The approximately 170 million U.S. TikTok users who would regain uninterrupted access to the platform. TikTok's parent company ByteDance and its shareholders. Content creators and influencers who rely on TikTok for income. Small businesses that use TikTok for advertising and customer outreach. App stores (Apple, Google) and web hosting companies that would no longer face legal liability for distributing the app. Digital advertising companies that operate on the platform.
Who is hurt
U.S. national security and intelligence agencies that argued the original ban was necessary to prevent Chinese government access to American user data. Competing U.S.-based social media platforms (Meta, YouTube, Snap) that may lose market share if TikTok continues operating without a divestiture. Legislators and officials who negotiated the original law. American companies that had been positioning to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations. Citizens and advocacy groups concerned about foreign data collection on U.S. residents.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the original ban unconstitutionally restricts the speech of 170 million Americans who use TikTok as a primary platform for news, expression, and commerce — a concern echoed by the Supreme Court's recognition in Packingham v. North Carolina (2017) that the internet is "the modern public square." They contend that a blanket prohibition on a platform used by more than half of all Americans is a disproportionate response to speculative national security concerns, and that less restrictive alternatives — such as data localization requirements or independent audits — could address any genuine risks without silencing a major channel of public discourse.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the original law was a carefully targeted national security measure, not a speech restriction — it regulated the corporate ownership structure of a distribution platform, not the content Americans post or view. They contend that ByteDance's legal obligations under Chinese national security law, which can compel companies to share data with the Chinese government, create a documented and structural risk to the personal data of 170 million Americans, including military personnel and government employees. Repealing the law without any replacement safeguard, they argue, eliminates the only enforceable mechanism for addressing that risk.
Constitutional context
The First Amendment is the central constitutional issue. The underlying ban was challenged as a restriction on speech, and the Supreme Court unanimously upheld it in January 2025, finding that the government's national security interest justified the burden on speech. Repealing the ban raises the inverse question: whether Congress may restore access to a platform it previously restricted. The Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) also applies, as Congress is regulating the distribution of a foreign-controlled digital service in interstate commerce.
Checks and balances
The executive branch (President) would lose the authority to designate foreign-controlled apps as national security threats under the repealed framework; Congress would reclaim sole authority over this policy area, with no automatic mechanism for the President to reimpose restrictions without new legislation.
Historical precedent
The Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act (2024) enacted the original ban; the Supreme Court unanimously upheld it in TikTok Inc. v. Garland (January 2025), making this bill a direct legislative reversal of a recently adjudicated federal statute.