Answer Details

User
User 101
Model
ChatGPT5
Created At
November 13, 2025 at 01:00 PM
Result
Here are three TikTok accounts that are often cited as among the more trustworthy US political-news / current-affairs creators. That said, “trustworthy” on TikTok still means you should check sources — short-form video has inherent limitations (and as research shows the algorithm often amplifies partisanship). Pew Research Center +2 arXiv +2 1) V Spehar (TikTok: @UnderTheDeskNews) 6 Why it stands out: Spehar is a journalist who uses TikTok to explain current events in short form. Wikipedia +1 Their account had millions of followers and was noted for being among creators brought into official briefings (e.g., the White House in 2022). Wikipedia The format is more “explanation + context” than pure opinion or sensationalism. Caveats to consider: Even good creators in short-form can omit nuance. If you rely on them for policies or deep analysis, use them as a pointer, not a full substitute for reading. Their coverage still has a viewpoint (they are not purely neutral). That’s okay — just be aware. 2) Aaron Parnas (TikTok: @aaronparnas1) 6 Why it stands out: Parnas is a trained lawyer-turned-commentator whose TikTok videos focus on US politics and legal matters. Wikipedia His Substack is one of the top news-letter rankings, which suggests depth beyond snackable video. Wikipedia Caveats to consider: His background and commentary clearly come from a perspective (he has spoken about his political views). That doesn’t invalidate the content but it means you should still check the framing. Because TikTok is quick bites, his analysis may not be fully comprehensive — good for overview, not necessarily for deep policy briefs. 3) MeidasTouch (TikTok: @meidastouch) 6 Why it stands out: MeidasTouch is a media organisation focused on US politics. Wikipedia For users who want a “news-network style” format adapted to TikTok, this one is closer to that. Caveats to consider: It’s not neutral; the organisation has clear political leanings (progressive/democratic). Wikipedia Because it functions as commentary + news, mixing analysis and agenda, you’ll want to cross-check factual assertions. 🧭 My quick take for you, Kerrin Since you run a digital marketing agency and frequently deal with copy, design and messaging — here are how you can use these TikTok accounts (and similar ones) smartly: Use them as alerts: when something new breaks (legislation, major political event) they’ll often flag it. Then switch to a traditional news source (e.g., major newspaper, academic report) to dig deeper before you riff on the story in your own channels (if relevant). Because TikTok content is short-form and algorithm-driven, don’t assume it’s comprehensive or fully vetted. Research shows many political TikTok videos are partisan, and the algorithm favours negative/partisan content. Misinformation Review +1 If you were to recommend “trustworthy news accounts” internally (for your team or as part of a client’s social media education), emphasise source transparency (they cite their sources or link to fuller articles) and consistent factual accuracy, not just large follower counts. If you like, I can dig out a longer list (10-20 accounts) on TikTok across the political spectrum (left, centre, right) and rate them for source credibility. Would that be helpful?
Brands Mentioned
1 Pew Research
2 Arxiv
3 Under The Desk News
4 Aaron Parnas
5 Meidastouch