US President Donald Trumpโ€™s executive orders banning transactions between US citizens and Chinese entities Wechat and Bytedance are about to be challenged in court, with short video platform Tiktok planning to file a federal lawsuit as early as Tuesday while a group of Chinese American lawyers announced it would file multiple lawsuits to challenge the Wechat ban.

Why it matters: Trumpโ€™s executive orders, announced late Thursday, aren’t just pitting the White House against Chinese companies: it puts the administration on a collision course with US consumers. It may also be illegal, according to the US Wechat Users Alliance.

Read more: US Wechat ban will mean more than lost connections

Details: Tiktok will argue that the executive order is unconstitutional because it did not give the company a chance to respond, and that concerns about Tiktok as a national security risk are โ€œbaseless,โ€ according to an NPR report.

  • In a statement released August 7, Tiktok said it was โ€œshockedโ€ by Trumpโ€™s order. โ€œThis Executive Order risks undermining global businesses’ trust in the United States’ commitment to the rule of law,โ€ the company said.ย 
  • A group of Chinese American lawyers announced (in Chinese) on August 8 that it would file lawsuits after โ€œmultiple rounds of discussionsโ€ in the close-knit community about the Trump’s executive order involving Wechat. Some of the lawyers formed a non-profit organization, US Wechat Users Alliance, to assist fundraising efforts to file suits in multiple locations.ย 
  • They will argue that the executive order goes against provisions of the US Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act, according to the announcement.
  • Clay Zhu, an attorney at Deheng Law Offices in California who is involved with the litigation efforts, told TechNode that the term โ€œtransactionโ€ used in the Wechat order refers to a previous executive order from May 15, 2019. That order, focused on securing the US technology supply chain, defined transaction as โ€œacquisition, importation, transfer, installation, dealing in, or use of any information and communications technology or service.โ€ย 
  • If the May 2019 definition of โ€œtransactionโ€ is applied to Wechat, Zhu added, it would effectively be a total ban of the app.ย 
  • The group hasnโ€™t yet filed any suits, but California or Washington state are top choices due to their more liberal courts and judges favorable to the issues they will raise, Zhu said.
  • โ€œWe understand that Wechat is a flawed app. We can choose not to use it, but Mr. President has no right to make this choice on our behalf,โ€ the announcement said.ย 

“Trumpโ€™s reasons for doing this are not well articulated and thereโ€™s been no testing of his reasons. He says Wechat violates our national securityโ€”how? Whereโ€™s the evidence? This needs to be investigated by the courts.”

โ€”Angus Ni, attorney at AFN Law involved in the litigation against Trump’s executive order, to TechNode on Monday

Context: Anti-China rhetoric from the US government is solidifying into plans to keep Chinese tech out of the US. 

  • Wechat has 19 million daily active users in the US, and Tiktok has over 100 million monthly users in the country.
  • A US State Department-initiated program announced on August 5 dubbed the Clean Network would purge made-in-China tech from US networks.ย 
  • Huawei, a long-time target of the Trump administration, was placed in May 2019 on a list of foreign firms deemed a risk to national security.