Top TikTok Moments of the 2024 Election Campaign

TikTok has become a key player in the 2024 campaign media landscape, with almost 40% of adults under 30 regularly getting their news from the platform, according to a Pew study.

With Meta’s decision earlier this year to de-prioritize political content, TikTok has become a crucial tool for reaching young voters, despite ongoing controversy. Kyle Tharp, author of the FWIW newsletter, which tracks digital politics, says, “TikTok is really the only social media platform where campaigns or political groups can have their content served to people that don’t already follow them.”

Tharp believes that both former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris embracing non-traditional media like TikTok in their 2024 campaigns signals a shift in how voters engage with politics. He says, “Increasingly, those types of persuadable voters that [candidates] need to reach are not consuming news and information on mainstream platforms,” he says. “They’re not watching CNN, they’re not reading the New York Times, and instead, a lot of them are getting their news about the election from social media platforms.”

TIME spoke to Tharp on Oct. 31 to discuss the top five campaign moments that went viral on TikTok. He says in 2024, the most successful TikTok moments for campaigns have ranged from in-depth explanations of Project 2025 to a remixed song based on a Trump debate quote about immigrants “eating the pets.”

Harris becoming the nominee

When Harris became the Democratic nominee at the end of July after President Joe Biden dropped out of the race, she experienced a surge of support online. “It just unleashed a complete vibe shift on the platform,” says Tharp. 

When Biden ended his re-election campaign and endorsed Harris on July 21, the campaign’s TikTok following increased after rebranding from @BidenHQ to @KamalaHQ. Users embraced meme culture, using a May 2023 quote from Harris, in which she recalled her mother asking, “Do you think you just fell out of a coconut tree?” and creating TikTok edits in the neon green signature color of singer Charli XCX’s “Brat Summer” trend.

“There was a lot of reporting earlier this spring where it showed consistently there’s a lot of negative sentiment towards Joe Biden and a lot of positive sentiment towards Donald Trump,” says Tharp. “And after Kamala Harris became the nominee, that really shifted, and the majority of posts mentioning Harris were positive, and a majority of folks mentioning Trump were negative. And that has really stayed static throughout the entire election cycle.”

Harris-Trump presidential debate

The between Harris and Trump was another significant moment on the platform. “Millions and millions of people watched the debate on traditional television, but tens of millions of people were watching the debate on TikTok,” Tharp says. “Maybe they don’t really care to sit down and watch a 90-minute TV segment, but they will be scrolling through their feeds to see the top clips or what people are saying about the debate.” 

Trump’s false claim about became a trending audio, while videos of Harris’s reactions to some of Trump’s comments “took off like wildfire” on the platform, Tharp says. 

Project 2025 

Content explaining , an initiative from the conservative Heritage Foundation that lays out policy recommendations for the next Republican President, made waves on TikTok earlier this year. The content primarily took the form of explainers, breaking down the impact of proposed policies. (Trump has distanced himself from Project 2025.) 

“From April to June, we really saw tons and tons of individual creators, not just the campaigns, but individual creators talking about Project 2025, on TikTok,” says Tharp. 

Trump’s McDonald’s stunt

Footage of Trump serving fries at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania on Oct. 20 has generated significant views on the platform. “Trump’s stunt at McDonald’s… really paid off for his campaign on TikTok. It generated like over 200 million views on pieces of content about it, which was really wild and unexpected,” Tharp says.

“A lot of Americans view Trump as a reality TV star that does cartoonish weird things,” Tharp adds,and that type of behavior really captivates audiences.”

Celebrity and creator endorsements 

throughout the past 100 days have captured a lot of engagement, Tharp says. The Harris campaign has found success posting videos featuring Barack and , and celebrities such as Usher, while the Trump campaign has seen success tapping influencers like Jake and Logan Paul and billionaire . 

“Most people go to TikTok for non-political content, and so when you’re able to show celebrities and non-political folks in your content, it probably pops off a lot more,” Tharp says.