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Monday, August 31, 2020
Forty percent of Americans back Trump executive order on TikTok: Poll
By Reuters
Forty percent of Americans back President Donald Trump’s threat to ban
videosharing app TikTok if it is not sold to a U.S. buyer, according to a
Reuters/Ipsos national poll, suggesting that many support the effort to
separate the social media upstart from its Chinese parent.
The poll published Monday, which surveyed 1,349 adult respondents across
the United States, found that 40 per cent backed Trump’s recent
executive order forcing China’s ByteDance to sell its TikTok operations
in the United States by September 15. Thirty percent of the respondents
said they opposed the move, while another 30 per cent said they didn’t
know either way.
The responses were largely split along party lines, and many of those
who agreed with Trump’s order said they do not know much about TikTok.
Among Republicans, for example, 69 per cent said they supported the
president’s order while only 32 per cent said they were familiar with
the app. Twenty-one percent of Democrats also supported Trump’s order
and 46 per cent said they were familiar with TikTok.
The figures suggest most Americans had only “a fleeting knowledge of the
brand,” said Dipanjan Chatterjee, vice president and principal analyst
at Forrester Research. Chatterjee said the negative attitudes were
likely the result of the public rhetoric around TikTok - and increasing
tensions with Beijing.
“Clearly there’s been a politicization of TikTok,” he said.
TikTok users have captured the teenage zeitgeist with catchy
song-and-dance videos in the United States and elsewhere, but its parent
company’s ties to Beijing have been the subject of bipartisan concern
as relations with China deteriorate.
Those worries culminated earlier this month in a do-or-die order from
Trump to ByteDance, with the Trump administration saying that TikTok is a
potential national security risk due to the vast amount of private data
the app is compiling on U.S. consumers. TikTok claims about 100 million
monthly active users in the U.S.
The Chinese company must now divest TikTok in the United States.
Microsoft Corp and Oracle Corp are among U.S. companies fighting to snap
up its assets.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 38 per cent of respondents said they
were either very or somewhat familiar with the app and 25 per cent said
they had watched a video on the platform. Thirty-five percent agreed
with the statement that they had “heard of it, but that’s about it.”
Americans also appeared to be more critical of the Chinese company than
they were of American-based technology companies: 47 per cent of
respondents said they either held very unfavorable, somewhat
unfavorable, or “lean towards unfavorable” attitudes toward TikTok. By
contrast, just 11 per cent said they had similarly unfavorable
impressions of Seattle-based Amazon - the world’s largest online
retailer which is facing allegations of monopolistic behavior from both
sides of the U.S. political aisle.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online, in English, from August
25-27 throughout the United States. The poll has a credibility interval,
a measure of precision, of about 3 percentage points.
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