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Norms Impact

Trump says TikTok should be tweaked to become “100% MAGA”

A president publicly floated tuning a major social platform’s algorithm to serve his movement while a government-shaped takeover structure and reported federal “cut” normalize state leverage over private speech.

Executive

Sep 26, 2025

Sources

Summary

Donald Trump signed an executive order restructuring TikTok’s U.S. operations while publicly saying the platform’s algorithm should be tweaked to become “100 percent MAGA.”
The order centralizes government-facilitated control over ownership, data security, and governance of a major speech platform, while insiders described talks about investors paying a multibillion-dollar fee to the U.S. government and potential government designation of a board member.
The practical consequence is a precedent where federal power can reshape, monetize, and indirectly steer the information environment used by 170 million Americans.

Reality Check

This conduct sets a corrosive precedent: federal power positioned to extract value from, and potentially steer, a speech platform’s governance and algorithm, weakening our First Amendment culture and the public’s ability to receive information free from state-aligned manipulation. If a “multibillion-dollar transaction fee to the U.S. government” or a government-designated board seat is tied to official action on the divestiture, it raises serious anti-corruption exposure under 18 U.S.C. § 201 (bribery/illegal gratuities) and 18 U.S.C. § 1346 (honest-services fraud), depending on the quid pro quo facts. Even if prosecutors never charge it, normalizing government-involved business decisions and monetized approvals invites weaponized regulation where disfavored platforms or speakers face coerced restructuring, a direct threat to our rights and democratic stability.

Detail

<p>Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed at “saving” TikTok by enabling a transfer of TikTok’s U.S. operations to a U.S.-controlled venture structured to comply with a law barring majority ownership by a foreign adversary.</p><p>Trump said Oracle would secure U.S. user data and that a new board would manage the venture, with ByteDance retaining one seat and six seats assigned to U.S. investors; reports cited Oracle CEO Larry Ellison as a likely board member and suggested David Ellison could also be included. Trump told Fox News that Rupert Murdoch and Lachlan Murdoch would likely be part of the investor group and claimed the deal was tentatively approved by Xi Jinping, though Chinese media had not confirmed this. Vice President JD Vance said the new U.S. company would be valued at about $14 billion.</p><p>Reuters reported key details remained unresolved, including control of the algorithm. The New York Times reported investor discussions about paying a multibillion-dollar transaction fee to the U.S. government, and the Wall Street Journal reported at least one board member could be designated by the government.</p>