美国禁止中国的社交媒体平台Is Popular, Except Among Younger Voters
Followingwarningsfrom U.S. officials that TikTok — owned by Chinese tech firm ByteDance Ltd. — poses national security risks due to its potential exploitation by the Chinese government, state and federal lawmakers have taken measures to ban use of the popular social media app.
As Chinese-based social media platforms like TikTok and WeChat face scrutiny in the United States, a new Morning Consult/Politicosurveyfinds that a slim majority of registered voters support a ban on Chinese-based social media platforms in the United States, but younger voters are more divided on the proposal.
Slim Majority of Voters Support a Ban on Chinese-Based Social Media Platforms in the United States
Republicans, baby boomer voters most likely to support the bans
- The survey shows 53% of voters support a ban on Chinese-based social media platforms in the United States, while a slightly higher share (59%) support banning the platforms from government-issued devices.
- Republicans were more likely than Democrats to support both proposals. Democratic voters were more likely to back the ban for government devices (56%) than the U.S. prohibition (48%).
- The U.S. ban had strong support among baby boomer voters, with 2 in 3 backing it, while the proposal was more divisive among younger generations. Gen Z voters were slightly more likely to oppose (41%) than support (32%) such a ban, while another 28% didn’t know or had no opinion. Millennial voters were roughly split on the ban, with 39% supporting it and 34% opposing it.
- The survey also asked voters about their support for the same bans but for Russian-based social media platforms. The share of voters who supported the measures for Russian platforms were roughly the same as those who backed the Chinese-based prohibitions.
TikTok bans going viral
In late November, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R)issued an executive orderthat banned state employees and contractors from using TikTok on state-owned devices. Since then,nearly 20 stateshave followed suit in restricting government employees from using TikTok and other apps with potential ties to adversarial foreign governments.
Congress is also getting involved, withone billthat would ban the use of TikTok on phones and devices issued by the federal government or a government corporation, and another piece oflegislationthat would ban the use of TikTok in the United States and also prohibit all transactions related to Russian- or Chinese-based social media companies. The first billunanimously passed in the Senateand was addedto a government spending package set for a vote this week.
It is unclear whether President Joe Biden would sign the bills into law, as his administration reportedly continues to carve out a national security agreement between TikTok and the United States that has been plagued bydelaysover severalsticking points.
The latest Morning Consult/Politico survey was conducted Dec. 16-19, 2022, among a representative sample of 2,001 registered voters, with an unweighted margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
Brian Yermal is a research editor on the Industry Intelligence team, where he edits the team’s email newsletters, written analysis and reports. Brian previously worked as a copy editor at the Altoona Mirror newspaper in central Pennsylvania. He graduated from Penn State University with a bachelor’s degree in journalism.