Tim Walz wouldn't call for TikTok ban on government devices even though over 75% of other states did
China hawks are calling out Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, for failing to impose a TikTok ban on government-issued devices in his state, particularly considering more than 75% of other states did so amid national security concerns.
When asked in 2022 whether Walz planned to ban the Chinese-owned social media app on Minnesota-issued devices, the Democrat governor said his team was looking at the issue "holistically" and that he was deferring to tech experts in his administration for "recommendations." Walz also drew an equivalency between TikTok and X, formerly Twitter, arguing the Elon Musk-owned platform "can be somewhat dangerous."
"That equivalence goes to, I think, a broader confusion on the left that privacy is a protection from ourselves, from these big businesses. Not a protection from the government," said Trent England, executive director of Save Our States, a conservative nonprofit dedicated to defending the constitutional power of states. "They're more trusting toward state actors in general… Elon Musk, however powerful people think he is, he's not the Chinese Communist Party."
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Walz's decision not to implement a TikTok ban on Minnesota's government-issued devices stands in contrast with the actions of numerous other states, and is also out of step with the Biden administration.
In December 2022, President Biden signed a bill banning TikTok from all federally issued devices. This year, Biden went even further when he signed an additional bill in April to ban TikTok nationwide, unless its Chinese-owned parent company, ByteDance, divests its entire stake in the social