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Part of a series on TikTok. [View Related Entries]


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Overview

TikTok Political Content Censorship by U.S. Government Allegations refers to various theories and reports alleging that content on TikTok relating to controversial, U.S.-related topics, such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), anti-Zionism, protests and more, is being censored at the behest of the U.S. government and President Donald Trump's administration. The accusations went viral in late January 2026 after TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, finalized its deal to transfer power over TikTok’s U.S. operations to a majority‑American entity, TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC (split between Oracle, MGX, Silver Lake and ByteDance). The transfer was finalized on or around January 22nd, 2026.

Shortly after the transfer happened, people began posting on social media claiming that TikTok was censoring their content or reducing its reach. The purportedly censored content surrounded divisive political issues, mainly those posted from a leftist point of view and critical of the Trump administration. One of the most common examples was the censorship of the word "Epstein," with several examples of this being shared online. Some accused the U.S. government (and Trump ally Larry Ellison) of hypocrisy for claiming that the deal was made to stop censorship and control by China, then implementing censorship itself.

In an official statement, TikTok claimed that the issues people were experiencing were not due to censorship but a major data-center power outage. Around the same time, the California government announced that it would launch an investigation into the accusations of censorship. Numerous users also stated that they were deleting and leaving the platform amid the controversy.

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Background

Between 2024 and 2025, the U.S. government pushed to have TikTok banned or sold to the U.S. over concerns that China was using the app to spy on and influence U.S. citizens.

In September 2025, a White House executive order was set that would place TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC would run TikTok's U.S. operations.[1] TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC released a statement reading:

TikTok USDS Joint Venture's mandate is to secure US user data, apps and the algorithm through comprehensive data privacy and cybersecurity measures … It will safeguard the US content ecosystem through robust trust and safety policies and content moderation while ensuring continuous accountability through transparency reporting and third-party certifications.

On December 19th, 2025, ArsTechnica[2] reported that ByteDance reached an agreement to give U.S. investors majority control of the app's U.S. operations through TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC. Some of these investors include Oracle, Silver Lake and MGX.

On or around January 22nd, 2026, the deal between ByteDance and the joint venture was closed, officially putting the joint venture in control of TikTok's U.S. operations.[3]

Censorship Allegations

Surrounding the time that the deal between ByteDance and TikTok USDS Joint Venture was signed in late January 2026, the app's users began making posts claiming censorship, particularly relating to U.S. political content.

One early example was posted on January 21st, 2026, by X[4] / Twitter user @IbaraEleven, who shared four screenshots of comment removal notices for phrases including "free Palestine" and "free Luigi," referring to Luigi Mangione, garnering over 133,000 likes and 20,000 reposts in six days.



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Developments

TikTok's Response / California Government Investigation

On January 26th, 2026, the @tiktokusdsjv X[5] account, belonging to TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, made a post claiming that it had a major power outage at a data center that was causing issues with TikTok in the U.S., including multiple bugs, slower load times, timed-out requests, videos with zero views or likes and false reports of missing earnings.



Later that day, the @GovPressOffice X[6] account made a post announcing that California Governor Gavin Newsom was launching an investigation after receiving reports of "suppressed content critical of President Trump."[7]

On January 27th, 2026, CNBC[8] published an article about the alleged censorship as social media users continued to share their experiences with the alleged censorship. One section of the article reads:

When asked directly about recent accusations of censorship, including claims related to content about ICE, a TikTok USDS Joint Venture spokesperson said that videos of the incident in Minnesota were available on the platform and had been since Saturday.


Online Reactions

Numerous claims of political content censorship were posted online in late January 2026 on sites like X / Twitter, Reddit and TikTok.

For instance, on January 23rd, X[9] user @DavidLeavitt posted a screenshot of his TikTok page, showing a Trump-related video and an ICE-related video with an "ineligible for recommendation" banner.

On January 26th, 2026, X[10] user @Furbeti posted a screenshot of a community guidelines verification appearing after the user typed "Epstein," referring to Jeffrey Epstein, in their chat, writing, "Days after the US took over majority ownership of TikTok, the word ‘Epstein’ has been censored," garnering over 57,000 likes in a day.

The image was reposted to the /r/TikTok[11] subreddit that day, garnering over 9,000 upvotes in a day.



On January 27th, X[12] user @tiberiusfiles posted, "They told you they had to buy TikTok because China would use it to control you. Then, as soon as they got it, they showed you what censorship really was. The US is everything they claim to oppose," gaining over 41,000 likes in under a day.

That same day, TikToker[13] @yourfavoriteguy posted a video sharing examples of DMs being purportedly censored on the app, garnering over 1.1 million views in a day.



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External References


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