One America News, the network that spreads conspiracies to the West Wing
The conservative cable network One America News has a minuscule audience, attracts few readers on the web and has struggled to break into the television mainstream.
But thanks to one powerful viewer in the White House, the network’s influence — and its conspiracy theories — are echoing in the highest reaches of American politics.
President Donald Trump, responding to a One America News segment, floated a baseless theory yesterday that a 75-year-old man in Buffalo who was knocked to the ground by the police — and hospitalised after bleeding from his head — was “an ANTIFA provocateur” who had tried to interfere with law enforcement.
“@OANN I watched, he fell harder than was pushed,” the president wrote on Twitter. “Could be a setup?”
There is no evidence to support the claims about the man, Martin Gugino, a longtime peace activist who has been affiliated with human-rights groups and the Catholic Worker movement.
But One America News aired a segment that presented the false theory as reported news, as opposed to a baseless conspiracy. The segment would probably have faded into obscurity had Trump not chosen to amplify it to his nearly 82 million Twitter followers.
The One America News correspondent who narrated the segment, Kristian Rouz, is a Russian native who has also worked for Sputnik, a Kremlin-controlled news outlet, which was first reported by The Daily Beast. Sputnik has been accused by intelligence services of contributing to Russia’s efforts to interfere in American elections.
Later yesterday, One America News aired a follow-up segment that portrayed Gugino as a liberal extremist, “far from the kindly old man that many in the media are describing”, in the words of a correspondent, Pearson Sharp.
One America News, based in San Diego, was founded in 2013 by Robert Herring, a California businessman who made a fortune in the technology industry.
The network rallied behind Trump in the 2016 presidential election, and its coverage increasingly shifted to cheerleading on behalf of the president and his administration.
Trump, a keen tracker of his media coverage, took notice. On Twitter and sometimes at public events, he often promotes One America News as a preferable alternative to Fox News.
Inside the West Wing, One America News often airs on television screens alongside mainstream cable news networks.
The Herring family, in turn, has positioned One America News as a destination for pro-Trump viewers who feel alienated from more mainstream conservative outlets. Its White House correspondent, Chanel Rion, is now a staple of news briefings, often called on by Trump’s press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany.
In the segment about Gugino, the One America News reporter, Rouz, claims that “newly released video appeared to show Gugino using a police tracker on his phone trying to scan police communications during the protest”. The footage, as seen in the segment, offers no evidence to back up that assertion.
The allegation of a link between Gugino and a far-left anti-fascist group referred to as “Antifa” appears to have originated on Conservative Treehouse, a fringe right-wing website that has spread baseless conspiracy theories.
The unsubstantiated theory that Antifa activists were responsible for riots and looting at the protests prompted by the killing of George Floyd was the biggest piece of protest misinformation tracked by Zignal Labs, a research firm that follows the spread of falsehoods in the media.