FACT CHECK: President Biden Shared Video Of Trump Claiming Not To Care About Voters Is Missing Context

President Joe Biden shared a clip of former President Donald Trump on his campaign’s social media account that appears to show Trump claiming not to care about his voters. Trump: I don’t care about you. I just want your vote pic.twitter.com/kfA88jMekj — Biden-Harris HQ (@BidenHQ) June 9, 2024 Verdict: Misleading The claim is inaccurate. Trump was making […]

Trump crushes it on TikTok as account sails well past 4 million followers



Former President Donald Trump has joined TikTok, and the only video posted to his account has already amassed more than 72 million views.

In the video, UFC president Dana White says, "The president is now on TikTok."

Trump responds by saying that it is his "honor."

'The White House has made a mockery of the rule of law and fundamentally altered our politics in un-American ways.'

The video, which features footage of Trump at a UFC event, has earned millions of likes and thousands of comments.

Trump's TikTok account has already amassed 4.5 million followers, a figure that dwarfs the Biden-Harris HQ TikTok account, which has a bit more than 350,000 followers.

Last week, Trump — the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee who is aiming to beat incumbent Democratic President Joe Biden during the election later this year — was found guilty on all counts in a New York criminal trial.

A group of GOP senators has signed onto a pledge that says, "The White House has made a mockery of the rule of law and fundamentally altered our politics in un-American ways. As a Senate Republican conference, we are unwilling to aid and abet this White House in its project to tear this country apart. To that end, we will not 1) allow any increase to non-security related funding for this administration, or any appropriations bill which funds partisan lawfare; 2) vote to confirm this administration's political and judicial appointees; and 3) allow expedited consideration and passage of Democrat legislation or authorities that are not directly relevant to the safety of the American people."

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'A political tool': The recent TikTok ban could still help Democrats in the 2024 presidential election



The New York Post reported that the bipartisan effort to get TikTok to divest from its Chinese-owned parent company ByteDance contained something that could help Democrats in the 2024 presidential election.

The bill, which passed last week as part of a $95 billion foreign-aid package, has given TikTok nine months to break away from Chinese-owned ByteDance or face a complete ban in the United States. However, the timeframe can be extended by up to a year from the president.

Though the bill was a bipartisan one, it appears that Democrats will be able to use TikTok to leverage voters throughout the 2024 presidential election. The social media juggernaut has long been used by Democrats to reach out to young voters.

President Biden's team has actively engaged with a large contingent of TikTok users to spread their political messaging. And the Biden-Harris campaign TikTok account, called Biden-Harris HQ, has more than 300,000 followers.

It appears Democrats wanted the possibility for extending TikTok's use beyond the presidential election, given that an earlier bill that suggested banning TikTok was shot down that only allowed the president a six-month extension.

Republicans have now insisted that the Democrats will take advantage of the change leading up to the election.

"They will utilize it as a political tool. it is very helpful to [Democrats],” Rep. Jeff Van Drew said. “There are millions of young people who go on it and are very faithful to it."

“They wanted to get that extra bite at the apple. There is no reason they couldn’t divest within six months.”

The Post mentioned that a second Republican congressman suggested “a theory that some may call conspiracy . . . that Joe Biden wants his Chinese friends who influence ByteDance to have a November opportunity to help him out.”

Other House insiders suggested that the real issue was in the Senate. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer — who supported a TikTok ban — faced steep pushback from Senator Maria Cantwell, a fellow Democrat.

Cantwell stated: “I’m very happy that Speaker Johnson and House leaders incorporated my recommendation to extend the ByteDance divestment period from six months to a year. As I’ve said, extending the divestment period is necessary to ensure there is enough time for a new buyer to get a deal done. I support this updated legislation."

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Biden joins 'Chinese spy app' TikTok despite White House ban on federal accounts: 'lol hey guys'



The Biden campaign unveiled its new TikTok account Sunday — just days after Republican and Democratic lawmakers jointly called on the Biden administration to blacklist TikTok's Chinese parent company ByteDance and two weeks after FBI Director Christopher Wray told Congress the app enables the communist regime to "control data collection on millions of users."

Critics have blasted President Joe Biden over the decision to risk additional exposure to America's pre-eminent adversary in an admittedly self-interested bid to connect with potential voters. After all, Biden figured TikTok to be enough of a threat in recent years to ratify legislation banning millions of federal employees from using the compromised software.

"Hey by the way, we just joined TikTok," the Biden campaign noted Sunday on X.

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The post linked to the newly created account on TikTok, which presently hosts a Super Bowl-themed interview video of the geriatric president captioned, "lol hey guys."

Although now apparently a laughing matter, Biden ratified a spending bill in December 2022 banning the use of TikTok by millions of federal employees.

The social media platform made it an easy decision, having confirmed ahead of the bill's signing that it spied on Western journalists. Months earlier, BuzzFeed News obtained 14 statements from TikTok employees and leaked audio from internal company meetings revealing that China-based employees of ByteDance repeatedly accessed private data about American users.

A member of TikTok's Trust and Safety department reportedly also admitted in a September 2021 meeting, "Everything is seen in China."

The FBI and the Federal Communications Commissioned have since indicated ByteDance could share users' browser history, locations, and biometric identifiers with the communist regime, reported the Associated Press.

A compromised TikTok would amount to an additional weapon in the arsenal of an adversary that has sent spy craft over the mainland U.S.; operated illegal police stations on American soil; threatened diplomats; dispatched agents to execute espionage and political destabilization missions; and attempted to hunt down dissenters stateside.

The company has struggled to address security and privacy concerns with its "Project Texas" operation, which allegedly keeps American user data on U.S.-based Oracle servers. However, the Wall Street Journal reported two weeks before Biden's TikTok adoption that the social media platform continues to share data with its Chinese masters through unofficial channels.

FBI Director Wray told the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party last month that "[TikTok's] parent company is effectively beholden to the Chinese government and that is what in turn creates a series of national security concerns in the [Chinese] government's ability to leverage that access or that authority."

TikTok gives Beijing the ability "to control data collection on millions of users, which could be used for all sorts of intelligence operations or influence operations," added Biden's FBI director.

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"I think it is a threat that is very significant," Wray stressed ahead of the Biden campaign's TikTok adoption.

Congressional lawmakers from both major parties noted in a Feb. 8 letter to Biden Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo that "TikTok's software engineering personnel ultimately report to ByteDance leadership in the People's Republic of China (PRC). Moreover, any ByteDance data that is viewed, stored, or that passes through China is subject to the laws of China, a one-party authoritarian state hostile to American democracy."

"TikTok, which is legally specified as a subsidiary of ByteDance, updated its EU privacy policy in November 2022 to confirm that its staff in China have access to user data outside China to perform 'important functions,'" continued the letter. "From a security standpoint, this means that TikTok provides the CCP with the ability to weaponize the platform by suppressing, magnifying, and otherwise constructing narratives to target specific audiences abroad."

The Biden campaign told NBC News that its new TikTok account is "part of an effort to meet voters where they are."

Pew Research data revealed that as of late 2023, 32% of U.S. adults ages 18-29 regularly get news from TikTok. This demographic is presently the most favorable to the deeply unpopular president, who continues to trail former President Donald Trump in the polls.

The latest Economist/YouGov polling data indicate that Biden's job approval is 48% among the 18-29 age group — four points higher than his approval rating among the 30-44 age group and 10 points higher than among those ages 45 and older.

TikTok may be welcome stomping grounds for the Democratic president for reasons other than demographics.

Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) asked FBI Director Wray during a congressional hearing last month, "If the CCP were to want to change TIkTok feeds to bias one candidate or another in the upcoming presidential election, would they be able to do so?"

Wray answered, "My understanding is that under Chinese law that would be something that they would be permitted to do."

Following the Biden campaign's TikTok announcement Sunday, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) wrote, "Biden campaign bragging about using a Chinese spy app even though Biden signed a law banning it on all federal devices."

Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) wrote, "Panic is when the Biden campaign joins TikTok after the White House banned the app from devices a year ago."

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) tweeted, "Hey @joebiden, you've done a lot of dumb things over the last 3 years. Handing your data over to China may be the dumbest."

Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R-Fla.) said he was not "surprised President Biden has just joined #TikTok — a company that steals our private information & hands it over to the Communist Party of #China. Biden plays for #TeamCCP, not #TeamUSA."

"Nothing like giving the CCP all the data from a Presidential campaign," wrote Rep. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.). "Open invitation for election influence!"

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