Canada to redo TikTok review as court stops office shutdown

Canada tried to shut TikTok down, the court hit pause, and now the government has to redo its homework while TikTok keeps its lights on and its staff employed.

The court's pause that changed everything
  • A federal court in Canada stopped the government from shutting down TikTok’s business operations.
  • The freeze forces Industry Minister Mélanie Joly to restart a national security review.
  • The platform stays operational while the review gets a full do-over.
Why the shutdown vanished
  • The suspension followed a deal between the government and TikTok to scrap a 2024 shutdown order.
  • That order would have cut off TikTok for roughly 14 million Canadian users.
  • Instead of a hard stop, the strategy reset button got smashed.
TikTok’s reaction on the ground
  • From TikTok Canada’s side, relief came fast and loud.
  • Keeping the Canadian team intact protects multimillion-dollar investments and hundreds of local jobs.
  • Cooperation with Minister Joly is now the stated path forward.
What the government is doing next
  • Officials confirmed a new national security review is now underway.
  • Silence around details is being justified under the Investment Canada Act.
  • Translation for everyone else, the process continues, but no one is talking.
How this started in the first place
  • The original shutdown order came under former Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne.
  • The justification leaned on specific national security risks found during a year-long review.
  • That review targeted TikTok’s Canadian operations directly.
Jobs, taxes, and real-world impact
  • TikTok employs about 350 people across offices in Toronto and Vancouver.
  • Between 2019 and 2024, the company reported paying C$340 million in Canadian taxes.
  • Those numbers became leverage once jobs were visibly at risk.
Cultural fallout already happened
  • Even before the shutdown was paused, TikTok Canada started cutting back.
  • Support for major cultural programs and events was pulled last year.
  • The message landed that bans come with collateral damage.
Pressure from the top
  • In July, TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew directly asked for an urgent meeting.
  • The warning was blunt; without intervention, the entire Canadian workforce could be terminated.
  • Uncertainty also drove employees to leave, and hiring freezes followed.
Legal reality check
  • Law professor Michael Geist described the ruling as procedural, not a win on substance.
  • The move resets the strategy rather than resolving privacy or security concerns.
  • Pulling TikTok out of Canada never clearly addressed those concerns anyway.
A broader North American trend
  • This decision adds to TikTok’s recent wins in the region.
  • In the United States, TikTok preserved operations through a joint venture with Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX.
  • The deal created TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC.
What comes next
  • Under the US deal, TikTok plans to retrain its recommendation algorithm using only US user data.
  • That agreement is expected to close on January 22.
  • Meanwhile, Canada is back at square one, reviewing TikTok again instead of shutting it down.
 

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