January 28, 2026
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Newsom Probes TikTok as Users Report ICE‑Raid Content Suppression

Axios reports that California Gov. Gavin Newsom has opened a state investigation into whether TikTok is unlawfully censoring content critical of President Trump and his immigration crackdown, after users said over the weekend they were suddenly unable to upload videos about ICE raids and the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. TikTok attributes the disruptions to a 'major infrastructure issue' tied to a power outage at a U.S. data‑center partner and says videos of Pretti’s killing have been continuously available, but the timing has fueled the hashtag #TikTokCensorship and suspicions that the platform is muting Trump‑unfriendly material just days after finalizing a U.S. joint‑venture deal. Separately, Meta is blocking links to ICE List — a site that has doxxed thousands of alleged DHS employees — citing its policy against sharing personally identifiable information for law‑enforcement, military and security personnel. The fracas comes as activists and residents increasingly rely on TikTok and other apps to document and track ICE operations in Minnesota and other states, and as lawmakers like Sen. Chris Murphy warn that opaque, politically sensitive content policies on dominant social platforms are emerging as a major 'threat to democracy.' The story puts hard names and explanations to what had been viral complaints that posts about ICE and about Jeffrey Epstein were being throttled or blocked, and raises stakes for regulators looking at how much control politically exposed platforms can exert over real‑time protest and enforcement footage.

Immigration & Demographic Change Social Media Platforms and Censorship Trump Administration Immigration Crackdown

📌 Key Facts

  • Gov. Gavin Newsom has launched a California probe into whether TikTok is violating state law by 'censoring Trump‑critical content' tied to ICE raids and shootings.
  • TikTok says weekend posting problems stemmed from a power‑outage‑triggered 'major infrastructure issue' at a U.S. data‑center partner and insists ICE‑shooting videos have been up since Saturday.
  • Meta confirms it is blocking links to the ICE List doxxing site under policies banning publication of personally identifiable information for law‑enforcement, military or security personnel.
  • Users’ difficulty posting about ICE and about 'Epstein' has driven the #TikTokCensorship hashtag even as TikTok denies any rule against using Jeffrey Epstein’s name in DMs.
  • The controversy unfolds as Trump’s second‑term immigration raids and the Minnesota killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good have pushed millions of Americans onto TikTok and other platforms to share enforcement footage and organizing information.

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January 28, 2026