The Chinese Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, the Global Times, touted President Biden’s campaign’s use of TikTok and critiqued the “deep hypocrisy” of America’s politicians who call the social media platform a national security threat.
The opinion article in the CCP’s state media said that Biden’s campaign use of TikTok “highlights the unjust suppression” and “proves the hype nonsense.”
“As a social media app that has been heavily portrayed by the US as a ‘national security threat,’ TikTok being used by Biden’s campaign highlights the unjust suppression of TikTok by American politicians and proves the hype nonsense,” the article said.
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The Global Times argued that the short-form video social media platform has become a “necessary means” for American politicians to reach young voters.
Citing a 2023 survey report by the Pew Research Center, the Global Times said that about one-third (32 percent) of young Americans aged 18 to 29 say they regularly get their news from TikTok.
The CCP newspaper said that American politicians are “very self-contradictory when it comes to TikTok.”
The article argued that Biden’s campaign’s use of TikTok proves that the social media platform is not a national security threat and proves the “deep hypocrisy” of American politicians.
“In the end, we are witnessing that Washington’s behavior toward TikTok is unacceptable to the public and society, so politicians have to choose to compromise for votes,” Li Haidong, a professor at the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times.
The Biden campaign’s TikTok video sparked outrage after the administration banned the Chinese-owned app from federal devices over security concerns.
Last February, the administration set a 30-day deadline for government agencies to purge the app from federal devices.
The social media platform, owned by Chinese company ByteDance, is popular among younger Americans.
Biden previously joined forces with TikTok influencers amid his re-election run, and the Democratic National Committee also joined the platform.
The president’s campaign joining the Beijing-based social media platform could present unique security risks.
Most notably, the Chinese Communist Party’s cybersecurity law allows government authorities to access companies’ data.
TikTok and the White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall contributed to this report.