Trump’s message to ‘the young people of TikTok’ and Gen Z: ‘You owe me big’
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Trump’s message to ‘the young people of TikTok’ and Gen Z: ‘You owe me big’

Why This Matters

Trump endorsed the idea of a TikTok ban all the way back in 2020.

October 6, 2025
06:57 PM
3 min read
AI Enhanced

Cybersecurity·Social MediaTrump’s message to ‘the young people of TikTok’ and Gen Z: ‘You owe me big’By Nick LichtenbergBy Nick LichtenbergFortune Intelligence EditorNick LichtenbergFortune Intelligence EditorNick Lichtenberg is editor and was formerly Fortune's executive editor of global news.SEE FULL BIO President Donald Trump.Andrew Harnik/Getty ImagesPresident Donald Trump attempted to curry favor with what he called “the young people of TikTok” on Monday, essentially arguing that Gen Z should be thankful that he didn’t ultimately through on his own executive order from 2020 to ban their favorite social-media app.

“To all of those young people of TikTok, I d TikTok, so you owe me big,” Trump said in his first TikTok post since the 2024 election, filmed in the Oval Office.

“And now, you’re looking at me in the Oval Office, and someday one of you is going to be sitting right at this desk, and you’re going to be doing a great job also.” Over the past five years, the TikTok ban has evolved on a bipartisan basis.

After Trump floated the idea during his first presidency, it became a 2024 law signed by President Joe Biden, requiring TikTok to either sell its U.S. operations or face a ban.

In recent weeks, Trump has announced a deal, which is still pending, while holding talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

TikTok’s American wing will be controlled by a conium of Trump-aligned billionaires including Larry Ellison, Rupert Murdoch, and Michael Dell.

Trump’s TikTok pivot In a historical reversal, Trump, who once aggressively pushed to ban TikTok, recently signed an executive order allowing an American conium to purchase and restructure the app’s U.S.

operations, thus sparing it from hibition. The deal is believed to be valued around $14 billion, far less than analysts say the American operations of TikTok would be worth in an open auction.

Trump’s claim of “saving TikTok” refers to his role in apving this deal to keep the platform a in the U.S., a move he now frames as a significant favor to the app’s primarily young user base.

This turnaround is a notable example of political adaptation, as TikTok has become the dominant social media platform for users under 30, with an estimated 170 million users, viding a vital communication channel for news, entertainment, and political discourse.

Trump’s campaign insiders have acknowledged this strategic embrace, highlighting the platform’s role in shaping youth opinion and signaling a new outreach apach aimed at a generation that traditionally favored the Democrats.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh.

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