The increasing Trumpification of TikTok
DONALD Trump isn’t on TikTok.
And he may not need to be, as his allies and surrogates transform it in his favor. The social-media platform, though still regarded as a hub for Democratic voices and liberal causes, has seen an uptick of right-wing, pro-Trump influencers since the last presidential election.
The increase comes as President Joe Biden signed legislation that would force a sale of TikTok by its Chinese owner or would have it banned in the US. That law has triggered a backlash from young voters who backed Biden overwhelmingly in 2020, some of whom also oppose his administration’s support of Israel’s war in the Gaza Strip. An internal analysis within TikTok found nearly twice as many pro-Trump posts as pro-Biden ones on the platform since November: 1.29 million pro-Trump posts versus 651,000 pro-Biden posts.
“If we allow the Democrats and the leftist organisations and leftist influencers to have a monopoly on the content that’s produced on TikTok, we will lose the next generation of Americans,” said C.J. Pearson, a social-media influencer with nearly 149,000 followers on TikTok who co-chairs the Republican National Committee’s youth advisory council.
But TikTok still presents challenges as the former president seeks to regain the White House.
Among the right, TikTok’s reach remains overshadowed by that of other social media platforms. Although a super political action committee backing Trump joined TikTok this month, it remains unclear whether his unpopularity with young voters, who are on the platform in large numbers, will make it difficult for him to find widespread support. And Republican politicians – including Trump – have largely resisted joining the platform, with many having vocally opposed it.
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Trump didn’t just oppose TikTok: He attempted to ban it several times as president, citing security concerns about the app’s Chinese ownership as young people used it to mobilise against him in 2020. Yet over the last month, TikTok has become part of his message to young people – that they should support him to protect their access to the platform.
“Young people, remember: Crooked Joe Biden is the one that wants to take your TikTok away from you,” Trump said this month in a video posted to Truth Social, his social media site. “So if you’re young and you’re smart,” he added, “vote for Donald Trump.”
TikTok has amassed roughly 170 million American users, the company’s chief executive officer told the Senate Judiciary Committee in January. The Center for Campaign Innovation, a conservative nonprofit, found after the 2022 midterms that a growing number of Republicans, particularly young and pro-Trump voters, were active on the app – though it was still behind Facebook, YouTube and other platforms.
Make America Great Again Inc., a super PAC promoting Trump’s presidential bid, joined this month under the handle @MAGA. Taylor Budowich, the group’s CEO, said it would “not cede any platform to Joe Biden and the Democrats.”
With about 14,000 followers, the account has shared content from Trump’s rallies, as well as videos criticizing Biden and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the independent presidential candidate. It’s had a sluggish start, with only a couple of viral videos so far. By comparison, Biden has about 326,000 followers on his campaign’s TikTok and Kennedy has an audience of 1.2 million.
The Trump campaign has remained noncommittal on whether it will make an account.
But John Brabender, a media consultant to Trump’s campaign who focuses on young voters, said they have thanked supportive influencers and informed them of rallies, calling them the “online reporters of today’s generation.” And he sees Biden’s critics as being the “strongest content” on social media: The president’s recent TikTok posts have been inundated with negative comments that are visible in the app.
“We have a wide range of pro-Trump, younger advocates that are on there, spreading the word and sharing content that gets shared wide-range, so we feel comfortable that we have a significant presence,” Brabender said. “But we’re always evaluating how to increase that presence.”
TikTok may still play a role in hurting Trump’s reelection bid, however. Polls show that even as he may have made gains with young voters, he remains unpopular with them, many of whom lean left on issues like abortion and gun control. There is plenty of anti-Trump content on the app, including viral videos warning about. Trump’s plans for a second term. The Biden campaign has maintained a steady stream of content criticising Trump, whom it views as an animating force among voters, including young people who might not remember his presidency.
“We are reaching Gen Z voters across the internet with content tailored for them, created by our own Gen Z staff,” said Parker Butler, the Biden campaign’s director of digital rapid response. “Every day, our TikTok account continues to produce sustained content that is being engaged with and picked up beyond the platform by earned media.”
And TikTok is still not a dominant platform on the right. Instead, the app is often used as an editing tool to repackage shorter bits of right-wing narratives to share on Rumble, X and other platforms, said Cristina López G., a senior analyst at Graphika.
Trump-aligned influencers on TikTok often have a fraction of their audiences on Facebook, X or Instagram, even as some conservative stars have gained large followings. The Dilley Meme Team, a group of right-wing content creators who support Trump, does not distribute content on TikTok as often as it does on X and other platforms, López G. said.
Some conservative influencers complain that their content is often taken down on TikTok. TikTok removes content that violates its community guidelines, including “disinformation or misinformation that causes harm to individuals, our community or the larger public.” TikTok also prohibits paid political content, which includes restricting users from “receiving payment to create political content.”
Trump’s changed stance on TikTok – which came shortly after a brief meeting with Jeff Yass, a Republican megadonor and TikTok investor – has raised broader questions about whether the party’s candidates should be active there, a source of disagreement among GOP consultants.
Andrew Mullins, a Republican digital strategist who worked on the presidential campaign of Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, argued that the platform offered a unique opportunity to engage with millions of voters.
“There are segments where there’s no overlap between TikTok audiences and Facebook and Twitter audiences, so when we’re talking to TikTok audiences, we’re talking to entirely new people that are tough to reach elsewhere,” he said.
Many Republicans are not sold. There are no sitting GOP members of Congress with official accounts on TikTok, compared with many Democratic members. The only Republican presidential candidate there, Vivek Ramaswamy, had previously called it “digital fentanyl” and was attacked by his GOP primary opponents after joining in September.
Courtney Hope Britt, the national chair of College Republicans, said that while some college chapters used TikTok, the national organization had no plans to join because of security concerns over its Chinese ownership.
Amanda Carey Elliott, a GOP digital consultant, called TikTok a “good boogeyman for us as a party,” saying that she viewed the platform as a better issue, rather than medium, to message on.
She questioned whether TikTok engagement would translate to support, saying, “It’s important to foster that next generation of conservative activists, but we also need them to be voters, too.” NYT
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