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Find the CEO series and other impactful conversations with government, business, and cultural leaders by searching for Tools and Weapons wherever you listen to podcasts. American support for a TikTok ban is declining, according to a study from the Pew Research Center. The survey of more than 5,000 U.S. adults found that just 34% of respondents supported banning the short-form video app.
When Pew ran a similar study in 2023, 50% of adults supported the TikTok ban. Over the same time span, the study also shows more Americans growing opposed to the ban. While 22% of respondents opposed it in 2023, that population rose to 32% in the recent study.
These trends were consistent across party lines, with support for the ban among Republican and Republican-leaning voters dropping from 60% to 30% since March 2023. Across the aisle, support dropped from 43% to 30%. But Americans who don't use TikTok were almost four times as likely to support the ban than those who do use the app. 12% of TikTok users supported the ban as opposed to 45% of non-users.
Though the popularity of this legislation has waned, TikTok's fate in the U.S. remains uncertain. With bipartisan support in the House and Senate, former President Joe Biden signed the TikTok ban into law last April, citing concerns about potential Chinese surveillance.
This gave the Chinese TikTok owner ByteDance until January 19th, the day before the next presidential inauguration, to sell the app to an American company. As the deadline rolled around and President Donald Trump prepared to assume office, the TikTok app went dark. But American users were only blocked out for around 12 hours before the app came back online. President Trump postponed ByteDance's sale deadline another three months,
until April 19th. American companies like Oracle, Microsoft, and Perplexity AI are rumored to have interest in buying TikTok, but by chance, has not indicated that it plans to sell.