Barron Trump Tipped for TikTok Role as U.S. Takeover Moves Forward
Barron Trump grabbed headlines last autumn when he enrolled at New York University’s Stern School of Business. Suddenly a private student has been linked to a possible public role where tech, youth culture and national security collide. The idea has supporters who see both a practical and political upside.
That possibility was floated by Jake Advent, who served as President Donald Trump’s social media manager during last year’s campaign. Advent said, “I’m hopeful President Trump will consider appointing his son Barron and maybe other young Americans to TikTok’s board to help ensure it remains an app young people want to keep using,”
The president signed an executive order late last month approving the transfer of TikTok’s U.S. operations from ByteDance to a group of American investors. Trump wrote that “the proposed divestiture would allow the millions of Americans who enjoy TikTok every day to continue using it while also protecting national security.” That line sums up the administration’s pitch: keep the platform, remove the foreign control.
Vice President J.D. Vance has also pledged that TikTok’s algorithm will now be controlled by the U.S. investors rather than ByteDance. That pledge matters because control of recommendation engines is the heart of the security and influence debate. It’s the technical lock that lawmakers and the White House argue will prevent foreign meddling.
Barron isn’t being touted for symbolism alone; insiders point to his hands-on role in digital strategy during the campaign. Multiple figures have pointed to the advice he gave his father on the subject while running for reelection, and that on-the-ground experience is what proponents highlight. It’s a rare bridge between fresh academic training and actual campaign-tested instincts.
“Barron has been very involved in recommending a number of the podcasts that we should do.”
“I got to tell you, hats off to the young man. Every single recommendation he’s had has turned out to be absolute ratings gold that’s broke the internet. He’s done a great job,”
Barron’s family have been confirming the same portrait of a young man with a feel for what moves attention online. His sister-in-law Lara Trump offered a similar perspective during an interview and described how Barron plugged into practical ideas that translated into traction for the campaign. Those close to the operation stress it was not theory but work that produced measurable audience gains.
“There have been many times I’ve been traveling over the course of the campaign with my father-in-law in the car,” Mrs. Trump said to Bet-David.
“‘Barron will call and say, ‘Dad, I have an idea of how you can get more votes,’ and it’ll be, you know, ‘You need to go to this baseball stadium’ or whatever,” she declared.
Meanwhile, First Lady Melania Trump remarked to Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” that she is “very proud of him about his knowledge, even about politics and giving advice to his father.” Those endorsements from inside the family reinforce the notion Barron is a trusted, practical voice on outreach and media. Whether that credibility translates into a board seat on a newly American-run TikTok remains to be seen.
How this unfolds will be watched closely: an appointment would be part test of the new ownership structure and part signal about who will shape the app’s youth-facing future. Officials and supporters present the move as a way to marry security with cultural relevance, putting young Americans in charge of a platform used by millions. The coming weeks should reveal whether classroom smarts and campaign chops turn into a role on the platform’s new U.S. oversight team.
Darnell Thompkins is a Canadian-born American and conservative opinion writer who brings a unique perspective to political and cultural discussions. Passionate about traditional values and individual freedoms, Darnell’s commentary reflects his commitment to fostering meaningful dialogue. When he’s not writing, he enjoys watching hockey and celebrating the sport that connects his Canadian roots with his American journey.