Trump Mobile starts shipping US-assembled T1 phones after months-long delay

Trump Mobile said on Wednesday it has begun shipping its long-delayed $499 T1 smartphones ​to customers, several months after the device was originally slated for release in August.

Trump Mobile said on Wednesday it has begun shipping its long-delayed $499 T1 smartphones ​to customers, several months after the device was originally slated for release in August. (Koshiro K, Alamy)


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Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Trump Mobile began shipping its T1 phones to customers on Wednesday.
  • CEO Pat O'Brien cited quality checks for the monthslong postponement; the company expects orders to be fulfilled within the next several weeks.
  • The company did not disclose how many phones had been pre-ordered or shipped, citing competitive reasons.

NEW YORK — Trump Mobile said on Wednesday it has begun shipping its long-delayed $499 T1 smartphones ​to customers, several months after the gold-colored device was originally slated for release in August.

The mobile venture, launched in June last year by the Trump Organization under a trademark licensing arrangement, had pushed back the T1 phone's release first to October and later to this week, amid questions over the feasibility of manufacturing a low-cost smartphone in the United States.

"Phones that were pre-ordered are starting to be delivered to customers this ‌week," Trump Mobile CEO ‌Pat O'Brien said in a statement to Reuters. He said the launch ⁠was delayed as the company worked through multiple stages ⁠of development and testing to ensure the phone's components met quality standards.

The gold-colored T1 Phone features a 6.78-inch display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, a triple-camera system and a 5,000 mAh battery, running on Android.

The company did not disclose how many phones had been pre-ordered or shipped, citing competitive reasons, but said it expected outstanding ‌orders to be fulfilled within the next several weeks.

Trump ​Mobile entered the crowded wireless market as a mobile virtual network operator, offering services through existing carrier infrastructure at a monthly price of $47.45, a reference to Donald Trump serving as the 45th and 47th president.

The launch has drawn scrutiny from ethics experts and lawmakers because the venture uses the Trump name while the president remains in office. Democrats questioned T-Mobile about its relationship with the ​Trump-branded service and raised concerns over potential conflicts of interest.

A spokesperson for the White House said ‌there were no conflicts ‌of interest ⁠and that President Trump's assets are in a trust managed by his children.

Industry analysts have also questioned Trump Mobile's claims around domestic manufacturing. The company initially promoted the T1 as a phone that would be "designed and built in the United States," despite the lack of ‌significant U.S.-based smartphone manufacturing ​infrastructure.

O'Brien said the first T1 devices are "assembled in ‌the U.S." and that the ⁠company ultimately aims ​to release a phone with most components made domestically.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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