If you can’t beat 'em? European politicians embrace TikTok despite
security fears
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[April 08, 2024]
By Andreas Rinke, Matthias Williams
BERLIN/LONDON (Reuters) -When Simon Harris became Ireland's prime
minister-in-waiting in March, he turned to a favoured platform to
express himself: TikTok.
In a video with 'THANK YOU' written in yellow lettering, the man who
will be Ireland's youngest Taoiseach told his 95,000 followers of his
rise from an "opinionated, moody teenager" bristling at lack of
educational help for his autistic brother.
Harris, sometimes dubbed the "TikTok Taoiseach", is among a vanguard of
European politicians embracing the Chinese-owned social media platform,
calculating that the need to reach younger voters outweighs security
concerns.
With European elections approaching in June, mainstream politicians are
wary of ceding ground to fringe parties who have successfully exploited
its short video format.
But TikTok is under increasing scrutiny in the West due to fears that
user data from the app owned by Beijing-based company ByteDance could
end up in the hands of the Chinese government.
Germany's security agencies, for example, have warned against using the
app over concerns it could share data with China's government or be used
to influence users.
In the U.S., lawmakers want to force a sale of the platform by its
Chinese owner or ban it from app stores. President Joe Biden has raised
concerns with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
MACRON AMASSES 4 MILLION FOLLOWERS
TikTok says security warnings are unwarranted and it does not collect
more information than other apps.
In a bid to assuage concerns, it launched a site to store European
users' data in Dublin last year and hired a third-party security firm to
monitor data flows.
ByteDance has denied using its product for spying, while the Chinese
government has also denied any such intention.
Harris, 37, was an early adopter in March 2021, producing videos that
ranged from a 60-second budget summary with musical background to
footage of him making a cup of tea when watching football.
Another was French President Emmanuel Macron, who boasts 4 million
followers since joining TikTok in 2020.
In Germany, the embrace of TikTok by senior politicians is a newer
trend, with Health Minister Karl Lauterbach becoming the country's first
minister to open an account in March.
"Revolution at TikTok: it starts today," he said.
"We cannot leave social media to the AfD", he said, of the far-right
Alternative for Germany (AfD) party that surged to become Germany's
second-most popular.
He was joined on Monday by his boss, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who
launched his own TikTok account and said on X: "I won't dance. Promise."
The caption for his first TikTok video, set to quirky music, read: "We
are just as surprised as you are! (And yes, the Chancellor really is on
TikTok now)".
Germany's top ministers have long had an established presence on other
social media. For example, Scholz, the finance minister, the economy
minister and the foreign minister all have Instagram accounts, as does
Lauterbach.
Reaching young voters is particularly pressing as 16-year-olds in
Germany can vote in the June European elections.
MAINSTREAM PARTIES 'PANICKING'
Among German parties, the AfD dominates TikTok. The party has 411,000
followers, its top candidate Maximilian Krah 41,000.
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Ireland's Minister for Higher Education, Simon Harris, poses for a
picture after being announced as the new leader of Fine Gael at the
party's leadership election convention, in Athlone, Ireland, March
24, 2024. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/ File Photo
"So all the other democratic parties are kind of panicking at the
moment not to leave this important platform and the young
demographic, the young voters, to this radical party," said
political consultant Johannes Hillje.
In one video, Krah encourages school pupils to confront left-wing
teachers. Another sees him dispensing dating advice to young men,
telling them to not watch porn or vote for the Greens. "Real men are
right-wing, real men have ideals, real men are patriots."
Mainstream politicians wanting to emulate such reach face a dilemma
because they are also suspicious of using a platform from an
authoritarian country.
Lauterbach said he can have reservations about TikTok while
recognizing its effectiveness. "I don't give the platform any
legitimacy by using it," he said. To prevent data leaks, he bought a
separate phone for TikTok use.
Macron's team also says the French president sees TikTok's
usefulness and the need for regulation as separate issues. "We
cannot ignore this population, the vast majority of whom do not
watch television news or read the press," an adviser who did not
wish to be named told Reuters.
Showing the level of security concern, Britain and Austria banned
TikTok from government employees' work phones last year.
But TikTok is becoming harder to ignore. A report by the Reuters
Institute for the Study of Journalism last year found that fewer
people were putting their trust in traditional media with more
turning to TikTok for news.
TikTok was the fastest growing social network in the report, used by
20% of 18- to 24-year-olds for news.
In the UK, the most senior minister with a significant presence on
TikTok is Defense Secretary Grant Shapps.
When the TikTok ban on government devices was announced, Shapps
responded on the platform with a clip from the 2013 film "Wolf of
Wall Street", where Leonardo DiCaprio's character Jordan Belfort
declares: "I'm not fucking leaving".
Shapps added that he had never used TikTok on government devices,
and that the ban was sensible.
Belgium banned ministers and civil servants from installing TikTok
on their official devices but politicians get around this by using
the app on separate devices.
The co-ruling Green party's politicians post TikTok videos with
devices that are only connected to 4G and have no other apps
installed, and the phones are not kept by the politicians themselves
but by their employees.
"Another reason we are on it (TikTok), is that we don't want to
leave the field to the far-left or the far-right," a Green party
spokesperson told Reuters.
"Young people get news through social media and TikTok is one of the
biggest platforms. Some politicians are comfortable with that,
others are not."
(Reporting by Andreas Rinke and Sarah Marsh in Berlin, Matthias
Williams in London, Hakan Ersen in Frankfurt, Nette Noestlinger in
Brussels, Catarina Demony in Lisbon, Emma Pinedo in Madrid, Suban
Abdulla and Alistair Smout in London, Elizabeth Pineau in Paris;
writing by Matthias Williams; editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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