Vivek Ramaswamy is in his TikTok era, with Jake Paul’s endorsement

Vivek Ramaswamy is on TikTok now, thanks to Jake Paul.

In the week since he joined the platform, Ramaswamy has amassed about 33,000 followers, secured an endorsement from one of the most polarizing creators in YouTube history and attempted to establish himself as the millennial politician who’s cool enough to use TikTok but anti-woke enough to appeal to the right. He’s also been the butt of Gen Z’s relentless comments about getting off to his content. (The top comments on his videos are consistently “Vivek I edge to you” and demands to hit the griddy.)

“I care about the issues that affect not just millennials, but Gen Z and all young people in this country,” the Republican presidential candidate said in his inaugural video. “We have a generation of politicians that is badly out of touch.”

Ramaswamy’s TikTok presence diametrically opposes his previous stances on social media and young voters. During an Iowa town hall days before he launched his account, Ramaswamy described TikTok as “digital fentanyl” from China. He has also notoriously proposed barring anyone under 25 from voting, unless they serve in the military or pass a civics exam.

Paul, a YouTuber turned boxer who has been embroiled in a string of scandals since he was kicked off of Disney Channel’s “Bizaardvark” in 2017, convinced Ramaswamy to join the app. In a tweet, Ramaswamy admitted that despite privacy concerns, the Republican party can’t reach young voters without leaving their “echo chambers.”

@jakepaul

Getting Vivek on Tik Tok because i believe our politicians of the future should connect with gen z and milennials on social where we all live and breathe. Its bizarre that in this day and age our presidents have no connection with us via social. Only the occasional tweets. Meet @Vivek Ramaswamy

♬ original sound – GenosPicks

Paul endorsed Ramaswamy in an unenthusiastic TikTok posted last weekend, which featured the candidate and influencer bouncing in what appears to be an attempt at matching the beat.

In follow up videos, Ramaswamy invited TikTok users to “keep the comments flowing,” which incited a fresh wave of edging jokes.

“You’re keeping something coming alright,” a commenter said.