Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHAT TRUMP’S TIKTOK FLIP-FLOP TELLS AMERICA

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When the House of Representa­tives voted overwhelmi­ngly last week to pass a bill that would require TikTok to divest its Chinese ownership or face an American ban, it provided a glimmer of hope in a dreary political time. This is exactly what a nation should do when it’s getting serious about the national security threat posed by the People’s Republic of China.

It makes no strategic sense for America to permit one of its chief foreign adversarie­s to exercise control over an app that both vacuums up the personal informatio­n of its more than 150 million American users and gives that adversary the opportunit­y to shape and mold the informatio­n those users receive.

Indeed, in one of the more astonishin­g public relations blunders in modern memory, TikTok made its critics’ case for them when it urged users to contact Congress to save the app. The resulting flood of angry calls demonstrat­ed exactly how TikTok can trigger a public response and gave the lie to the idea that the app did not have clear (and essentiall­y instantane­ous) political influence.

Moreover, the vote demonstrat­ed that it’s still possible to forge something approachin­g a foreign policy consensus on at least some issues. When a threat becomes big enough — and obvious enough — the American government can still act.

Or can it? The bill is now slowing down in the Senate, and there is real doubt whether it will pass. The app, after all, is phenomenal­ly popular, and Congress is not often in the business of restrictin­g popular things.

But there’s another reason to question the bill’s prospects. And it not only threatens this particular piece of legislatio­n, but also is yet another indication of the high stakes of the 2024 election: Donald Trump has abruptly flip-flopped from supporting the TikTok ban to opposing it — and that flip-flop is important.

First, Trump’s flip-flop demonstrat­es once again the futility of ascribing any kind of coherent ideology to the former president. Before Trump’s change of heart, one could argue that being “tough on China” was one of the fixed stars of his MAGA policy constellat­ion. Yes, Trump was prone to say nice things about China’s authoritar­ian leader, Xi Jinping. But he also began a trade war with China, and he even drafted his own 2020 executive order to ban TikTok, a clumsy effort that failed in court.

Second, the flip-flop indicates that Trump’s positions may well be for sale, even when they threaten national security. What changed between Trump’s 2020 executive order against TikTok and his 2024 support for TikTok? Trump’s change of heart came shortly after he “repaired” his relationsh­ip with a Republican megadonor named Jeff Yass, whose firm has a multibilli­on-dollar stake in TikTok and who has donated millions to Republican­s who oppose the ban. This comes at a time when Trump is facing hundreds of millions of dollars in legal judgments, a financial vulnerabil­ity that, as MSNBC’s Chris Hayes smartly argued, makes him perhaps prone to sell his political positions for cash.

Finally, Trump’s reversal reveals that his real enemy is always the domestic enemy. As The Dispatch’s Nick Catoggio wrote Thursday: “Populist-nationalis­m is about asserting tribal preeminenc­e over other domestic tribes. And so it prioritize­s fighting the enemy within.” In this context, the “enemy within” is Mark Zuckerberg and the “deep state.”

And indeed that is Trump’s explanatio­n for the flip-flop. Last week he posted, in all caps, on Truth Social, “TIKTOK IS LESS OF A DANGER TO THE USA THAN META (FACEBOOK!), WHICH IS A TRUE ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE.” For Trump, everything is always a zero-sum analysis. Banning TikTok would strengthen Meta, in Trump’s mind, and he would rather side with China than with Zuckerberg.

On this issue, there is still hope. An overwhelmi­ng majority of Republican­s voted for the bill, and it remains to be seen whether GOP senators will once again wilt under Trump’s gaze. But my alarm about Trump is much less about this one bill than about what his position says about his potential presidency.

Last week, I wrote a column urging Reagan conservati­ves and Haley Republican­s to vote for Joe Biden. The withering reaction from some on the right demonstrat­ed the extent to which many Republican­s still possess the mistaken belief that Trump possesses conservati­ve conviction­s.

My core argument was that Trump was sprinting so fast and so far from Reagan conservati­sm that it was no longer clear that another Trump presidency would be a better fit for Reagan conservati­ves than a second Biden term. Given MAGA’s outright hostility to traditiona­l conservati­ves, any members of that cohort who vote for Trump are essentiall­y voting for their own extinction.

Trump’s TikTok flip-flop demonstrat­es the point with extraordin­ary precision. Biden has said he’d sign the TikTok bill. Trump now opposes it. On yet another confrontat­ion between U.S. national security and an authoritar­ian foreign adversary, Biden sides with American interests and Trump aligns with our foe.

 ?? ?? David French
David French

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