A clear majority of Americans believe TikTok is an influence tool for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), with 58 percent of respondents to a Reuters/Ipsos poll agreeing the app is used to “influence American public opinion.” Only 13 percent of respondents disagreed.
A plurality, if not an outright majority, of Americans support banning TikTok, with 50 percent in favor versus 32 percent opposed. Notably, the pollsters only surveyed U.S. adults, not the under-18s, who account for a significant share of the app’s user base.
Reuters/Ipsos found a generational divide on the issue, with around six in 10 Americans over 40 supporting a ban but only four in 10 Americans aged 18 to 39.
Forty-six percent of Americans also believe the CCP uses TikTok to “spy on everyday Americans.”
Sixty percent said they did not believe U.S. political candidates should use TikTok to promote their campaigns. Joe Biden has refused to exit the platform, despite signing a bill that could ban the app — but only after the presidential election in November.
While TikTok is headquartered outside China, its parent company, ByteDance, is headquartered in Beijing. The CCP denies controlling ByteDance, but the Chinese Embassy directly lobbied Congress against the aforementioned bill, which requires ByteDance to divest from TikTok or else it will be blocked in the U.S.
In fact, the Chinese state owns “golden shares” in ByteDance, and a CCP official wields veto power on its board. The app strongly influences its users, with only 14 percent bucking its ‘For You’ content algorithm.
China recently forced Apple to remove several applications from its app store, including WhatsApp and Threads.