Shortly after service was restored, Senator Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas) expressed his thoughts on the return on X, sharing TikTok's post. Here's what he said.
The Republican senator said on Sunday that he believes the president will fill the inspectors general positions that were recently terminated.
The GOP Senator says the President would be wise to reverse his denial of security to his former Iran advisers.
TikTok is owned by ByteDance, which many Republicans, including Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders, have decried as having “significant ties to the Chinese Communist Party.” No critic has been louder than Tom Cotton, who says TikTok is “a Chinese Communist spy app” that “ endangers our national security and poisons our children .”
Arkansas has four seats in the House of Representatives, all held by Republicans. There are three ways for a sitting senator or representative to be removed from Congress. Members of Congress do not face term limits, but they do face elections. Arkansas elected its latest House Representatives in 2024. Senate elections will be held Nov. 3, 2026.
Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton issued a stern warning for companies working with TikTok, shortly after breaking with president-elect Donald Trump on the embattled platform’s shutdown. “Any company that hosts,
Senators Tom Cotton and Pete Ricketts said "there's no legal basis" for an extension to keep the social media platform online.
Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump's pick to be director of national intelligence, faced sharp criticism from Democrats and Republicans alike Thursday during a fiery confirmation hearing.
Most Democrats and even some Republicans seemed uneasy with Tulsi Gabbard and her answers to their questions during her confirmation hearing with the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton said he had seen recent intelligence that suggests all three former Trump officials remained targets of Iran.
President Donald Trump should "revisit" his decision to remove security details from three former senior national security officials, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee said Sunday.
In a wide-ranging interview on Sunday, Vice President JD Vance defended a variety of plans set in motion by President Trump during the first week of his term, including the beginnings of a promised crackdown on migrants living in the United States and an effort to supercharge oil and gas production.