Less than four months after joining the video app, Mayer said he was leaving. TikTok has been under pressure from the Trump administration
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SAN FRANCISCO — Kevin Mayer, the chief executive of the Chinese-owned video app TikTok, said Wednesday that he was resigning after the company came under sustained pressure from the Trump administration over its ties to China.
In a note to employees, which was reviewed by The New York Times, Mayer said that a series of changes to TikTok’s structure prompted him to leave. He did not address the timing of his departure. The app, which is owned by the Chinese internet company ByteDance, has been ordered by the White House to sell its U.S. operations by mid-September.
“In recent weeks, as the political environment has sharply changed, I have done significant reflection on what the corporate structural changes will require, and what it means for the global role I signed up for,” Mayer, 58, wrote in the email. “Against this backdrop, and as we expect to reach a resolution very soon, it is with a heavy heart that I wanted to let you all know that I have decided to leave the company.”
He added that he had signed up for a global role and that leading a global team had been a “big draw” for him.
Mayer’s departure underscores the difficulties facing TikTok as it has become a geopolitical piñata amid worsening U.S.-China tensions. As part of a campaign of being tough on China, President Donald Trump and other White House officials have said that TikTok poses a national security threat because of its Chinese ownership.
That led to Trump’s signing an executive order Aug. 6 to block TikTok if ByteDance did not sell the app’s U.S. operations within 45 days. A week later, he issued another executive order giving ByteDance 90 days to close such a deal.
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