UGLIEST RIGHT-WING LIES ABOUT JAN. 6 IS IMPLODING
Of all the lies the right has pushed about the insurrection attempt, one of the ugliest is that it was a false-flag operation designed to victimize virtuous Donald Trump supporters. Central to this is Ray Epps, a man widely depicted as an FBI informant who deviously manipulated Trump supporters into storming the Capitol.
Now The New York Times has obtained new evidence debunking this claim. This undercuts a key right-wing propaganda trope about the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol that the right has pushed for nearly a year.
This saga also exposes the falsity of a larger right-wing deception campaign: That Jan. 6 actually reveals the profound corruption of our legal and political institutions, from law enforcement to Congress. This spectacular up-is-down agitprop has been central to the whole story that the right tells about the post-Trump era.
The tale of Epps and the alleged false-flag operation started circulating after video surfaced showing him seeming to mobilize Trump supporters to enter the Capitol. A conspiracy theory took hold: Epps was not subsequently arrested, meaning he may have been an FBI agent planted to stir up Trump supporters into breaking the law.
There’s a lot more to this “theory,” all of which has been comprehensively debunked by Post fact checker Glenn Kessler. The short version: Epps never urged violence. He was interviewed by the FBI like others present on Jan. 6. His lawyer flatly declares he isn’t an FBI agent. He personally told this to the House committee examining Jan. 6. And there’s zero evidence to the contrary.
Naturally, none of this slowed down the right-wing machine.
Now the Times has delivered another big blow to this story. It concerns video that shows Epps at the Jan. 6 barricades whispering in the ear of a Pennsylvania man, who then confronts police. This has been held up by Republicans as more evidence of false-flag incitement by Epps, a small business owner from Arizona.
But it turns out that the Pennsylvania man actually informed FBI investigators that Epps told him to “relax,” not to attack, according to audio the Times obtained. And Epps himself separately told the FBI the same thing, the Times reports, once again undermining the conspiracy theory.
It’s important to stress that Republicans and right-wing media have constructed a whole superstructure of other wild allegations on top of this Epps tale.
These include claims that the Jan. 6 House committee is covering up important evidence of Epps’s role. That the FBI itself has suppressed this evidence. That the Justice Department is withholding such evidence from Congress. And that the Jan. 6 mob might have been seeded with many more FBI false-flag operators.
Ultimately the right-wing goal is to wield all those lies to erase a big truth: That the whole Jan. 6 saga is actually a story about how our institutions mostly held up under an extraordinary assault.
Vote counters performed heroically despite threats from mobs whipped up by the president. Republican officials rebuffed intense pressure to violate their official duty on his behalf. The courts slogged through months of despicable legal actions deliberately designed to invalidate the votes of millions based on lies, ultimately confirming his loss. Congress affirmed that loss after literally coming under violent assault.
That positive story doesn’t mean we should ignore the possibility of abuses by law enforcement and the Jan. 6 committee. This country has a long history of law enforcement targeting legitimate political activity.
But right now, the truly bad actors are the ones wielding lurid agitprop about our institutions in order to undermine the full Jan. 6 reckoning we need. So let’s hope that, along with the collapsing false-flag tale, in the public mind the larger story they’re trying to tell also implodes.