“…Research on TikTok has so far mainly been limited to the aforementioned research on the functionalities, operation and most frequent topics, as well as the motivations of its users (Bucknell Bossen & Kottasz, 2020;Lu & Lu, 2019;Lu, Lu & Liu, 2020;Omar & Dequan, 2020;Wang, Gu & Wang, 2019), especially teenagers. More recently, the platform study has also addressed its use in raising awareness among young people of the need to take preventive measures against the COVID-19 pandemic (Basch, Hillyer & Jaime, 2020;Basch et al, 2021;Zhu et al, 2020); the trends that emerged and narratives employed during lockdown (Ballesteros Herencia, 2020; Olivares García & Méndez Majuelos, 2020); its adaptation to digital journalistic media (Sidorenko-Bautista, Herranz de la Casa & Cantero de Julián, 2020; Vázquez-Herrero, Negreira-Rey & López-García, 2020); different aspects related to medicine and health but not linked to the pandemic (Herrick, Hallward & Duncan, 2020;Sánchez-Castillo & Mercado-Sáez, 2021;Villa Ruiz et al, 2021;Zheng, Mulligan & Scott, 2021;; and its role as a transmitter of misinformation (Alonso-López, Sidorenko-Bautista & Giacomelli, 2021). However, despite the need for work on political communications on social networks to go beyond the analysis of Twitter (Casero-Ripollés, 2018), studies on the political use of TikTok are scarce, probably because the presence of political topics in the videos is still an exception (Shutsko, 2020) and the lack of interest that videos on current affairs garner in the community (Lu, Lu & Liu, 2020).…”