United States

How TikTok exposed a crisis of competence in Congress

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

In March 2023, TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew testified before Congress in what was meant to be a serious national security inquiry. Instead, the hearing turned into a social media spectacle. Lawmakers posed questions that revealed startling technological ignorance—one asked if TikTok accessed the home Wi-Fi network, as if this were unique or suspicious. Another seemed unsure how the internet even worked. The five-hour session went viral, but not for the reasons intended. It exposed a digital knowledge gap in America’s highest lawmaking body.

What should have been a substantive conversation about surveillance, data sovereignty, and algorithmic control instead became a soundbite-fest. Clips of lawmakers fumbling through questions circulated on TikTok itself, turning Congress into a meme. The irony was not lost on viewers: a platform accused of undermining democracy had just unmasked the dysfunction of the very institution trying to regulate it.

Beyond the embarrassment, the incident reflected something deeper. Congress isn’t just struggling with TikTok. It’s struggling with tech governance as a whole. Decades-old institutional practices, generational divides, and partisan posturing have created a policy vacuum—one that powerful tech firms are only too willing to fill.

At the root of the issue is a profound mismatch between how quickly digital platforms evolve and how slowly Congress responds. Legislative inertia is not new, but the stakes are different in an algorithm-driven economy. Lawmakers are often years behind in understanding emerging technologies—let alone writing enforceable regulations. The average age in Congress hovers near 60, and while age doesn’t determine capability, the lack of digital literacy is increasingly evident.

This isn’t just a problem of poor optics. Without functional knowledge of how platforms operate—how content is served, what data is collected, how algorithms shape attention—Congress cannot meaningfully regulate digital ecosystems. This vacuum is filled by industry self-regulation, which tends to prioritize growth and engagement over safety and accountability.

Even when bills are proposed—like the RESTRICT Act, designed to limit foreign adversaries' control over digital infrastructure—they often conflate legitimate cybersecurity concerns with vague techno-nationalism. These efforts are met with skepticism from both privacy advocates and tech-savvy critics. The result: delay, dilution, or outright inaction.

TikTok has been positioned by some in Washington as a Trojan horse for Chinese influence. While its ties to ByteDance and the Chinese data law regime raise legitimate concerns, focusing solely on TikTok misses the bigger issue. The platform’s popularity among younger Americans—over 150 million users in the US—has made it not just a cultural force, but a political one.

News consumption is increasingly shaped by short videos and algorithmic curation. Political narratives, election disinformation, and ideological bubbles don’t spread in newspapers anymore—they metastasize on platforms like TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram Reels. Congress’s failure to grasp this shift is not just a technical failing—it’s a generational one. Lawmakers are still operating in a communications environment built for cable news and press briefings, while voters under 30 get their information through decentralized feeds driven by engagement metrics.

Ironically, even the congressional hearings themselves became TikTok content. The institution trying to assert control became a meme factory. This illustrates the depth of the platform's cultural reach—and the urgency of crafting policies grounded in understanding rather than fear.

The problem isn’t TikTok alone—it’s the exposure of deeper dysfunction in American governance. Congress has failed to pass meaningful legislation on digital privacy, AI ethics, content moderation, or tech monopoly power. Hearings are increasingly used as performative moments for partisan posturing rather than substantive debate. And because they are livestreamed and chopped into clips, they often serve more as campaign material than policy inquiry.

Lobbying power compounds this. Major tech firms spend millions annually to influence lawmakers, often outmatching the government’s own technical advisory capabilities. Without a robust institutional structure to translate complex technical realities into public-interest legislation, Congress ends up reactive rather than proactive.

This has long-term implications. If the public perceives Congress as out of touch or performative, trust in democratic institutions erodes. Young voters in particular—many of whom view TikTok as a primary platform for news, expression, and community—see little alignment between their lived digital reality and Washington's policy focus. The danger isn’t just policy stagnation—it’s generational alienation from the democratic process.

For businesses operating in the digital space, the congressional stalemate offers both opportunity and risk. In the absence of robust federal regulation, companies have greater freedom to experiment—but also greater exposure to public backlash and legal uncertainty. A lack of standardized rules means platforms are left to define what’s acceptable, often until a scandal forces sudden overcorrection.

For policymakers, the TikTok episode is a warning. Tech literacy must become a baseline competency in government. That means staffing offices with digital experts, investing in nonpartisan tech analysis teams, and holding more targeted briefings that avoid grandstanding. Otherwise, national conversations about digital sovereignty, youth safety, and algorithmic bias will be dominated by viral clips, not credible policies.

For the public—especially young users—the hearings offer a mixed message. On one hand, they reveal how disconnected Congress is from digital life. On the other, they underscore the need for civic literacy that goes both ways: users must also learn to critically engage with political narratives across platforms, and push for smarter digital governance.

TikTok didn’t break Congress—but it did show the cracks. If American democracy is to survive the algorithm age, it must modernize not just its tools, but its mindset. That means rethinking how oversight works in a hyper-connected world and refusing to treat viral spectacle as a substitute for institutional competence. A government that cannot understand the platforms its citizens rely on is a government losing the mandate to lead. The hearings should be a wake-up call. What happens next will show whether Congress has the will—and the humility—to evolve.

Congress must invest in its own digital literacy infrastructure. That means hiring technologists, creating bipartisan tech task forces, and empowering independent advisory bodies that can translate complex concepts into actionable legislation. More importantly, lawmakers must shed the belief that cultural relevance is a threat to their authority. In today’s fragmented media landscape, legitimacy is earned not by control, but by fluency—by showing up in the spaces where the public actually lives.

If Washington continues to confuse governance with performance, it risks becoming a relic in the eyes of a generation raised on swipe-speed information. The question isn’t whether Congress can regulate TikTok—it’s whether it can still regulate at all. That answer will shape the future of democratic legitimacy.


Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege

Read More

Leadership Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
LeadershipJune 25, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

What it really takes to lead through uncertainty

We didn’t realize it at first. We thought we were “pivoting,” like every startup does. We’d tell ourselves, “We just need to get...

Investing Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
InvestingJune 25, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

America’s 401(k) savings rate is up again—but the gap is still growing

Let’s start with the headline: in 2024, Americans saved more in their 401(k)s than ever before—on average. Vanguard reported a combined employee +...

Politics Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 25, 2025 at 12:30:00 PM

How Musk shook up DOGE—and shattered Trump’s trust

Elon Musk’s January 2025 appointment as “efficiency czar” for the US federal government marked the most controversial public-private fusion since the Eisenhower era....

Self Improvement Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
Self ImprovementJune 25, 2025 at 12:30:00 PM

Why saying “I was wrong” is a power move (And how to practice it)

You’re halfway through loading the plates. Someone leans over and says, “That’s not how it goes.” You smile, sure. But inside, you’re already...

Politics Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 25, 2025 at 12:30:00 PM

Europe’s best bet for strategic autonomy? Taking control of NATO

NATO is enjoying a geopolitical renaissance. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has jolted the alliance back into relevance, prompting a surge in European defense...

Politics Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 25, 2025 at 12:00:00 PM

How the Iran-Israel war could impact Iran, the US, and Netanyahu

If this moment feels especially ominous, it’s not just the headlines. Israeli strikes on Iranian targets have now drawn in direct US military...

Politics Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 25, 2025 at 12:00:00 PM

What’s next for Iran? The choice lies with its people

Iran’s long-running standoff with the West has once again returned to the global spotlight—this time fueled by retaliatory missile launches, a fleeting ceasefire,...

Economy Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJune 25, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Why a Hormuz blockade is more bluff than brinkmanship

As tensions soared in mid-June after US and Israeli military strikes hit Iranian nuclear sites, Tehran’s most alarming response wasn’t a direct military...

Politics Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 25, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Netanyahu declares victory, pledges to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons

Israel’s stated goal throughout the 12-day confrontation was clear: prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Prime Minister Netanyahu’s declaration—“We have thwarted Iran’s...

Economy Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJune 25, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Hong Kong stocks surge on Fed cut hopes and fund flow momentum

While Western investors parse every Federal Reserve signal for clues, Hong Kong’s stock market has already made its move. The Hang Seng Index...

Economy Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJune 25, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Hong Kong edges out Singapore to claim top spot as Asia’s most international city

The optics look great: Hong Kong tops the 2025 Asian Cities Internationality Index, scoring 73.7 to edge out Singapore’s 73.5. But that 0.2-point...

Politics Asia
Image Credits: Unsplash
PoliticsJune 25, 2025 at 11:00:00 AM

UK re-arms with US fighters designed for nuclear missions

The UK’s decision to purchase 12 F-35A fighter jets capable of delivering US tactical nuclear bombs isn’t just a military hardware update. It’s...

Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege
Load More
Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege