Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

GOP hopefuls embracing QAnon

Conspiracy theory belief looms going into fall elections

- By Jim Anderson, Nicholas Riccardi and Alan Fram

DENVER — When Lauren Boebert was asked in May about QAnon, she didn’t shy away from the far-right conspiracy theory, which advances unproven allegation­s about a so-called deep state plot against President Donald Trump that involves satanism and child sex traffickin­g.

“Everything that I’ve heard of Q, I hope that this is real because it only means that America is getting stronger and better, and people are returning to conservati­ve values,” she said.

At the time, Boebert was on the political fringe, running a campaign largely focused on her gun-themed restaurant and resistance to coronaviru­s lockdowns. She is now on a path to becoming a member of Congress after upsetting five-term Rep. Scott Tipton in Tuesday’s Republican primary. The GOP-leaning rural western Colorado district will likely support the party’s nominee in the November general election.

Boebert is part of a small but growing list of Republican candidates who have in some way expressed support for QAnon. They include Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is advancing to a runoff for a congressio­nal seat in a GOP-dominated Georgia congressio­nal district, and Jo Rae Perkins, the party’s Senate nominee in Oregon.

The trend pales in comparison to previous movements that have swept Capitol Hill, such as the 2010 tea party wave. But at a time when the GOP is facing steep headwinds among women and in the suburbs, the QAnon candidates could add extra headaches.

“The more times you have candidates who are crazy, the more it hurts your brand,” said John Feehery, a Republican consultant and former House leadership aide. “The trick is for Republican­s to embrace the anti-establishm­ent mood without embracing the crazy.”

Republican leaders have distanced from some candidates, such as Greene. But now that Boebert is the nominee in Colorado, the GOP made clear Wednesday it would support her.

“Lauren won her primary fair and square and has our support,” Minnesota Rep. Tom Emmer, the chair of the House Republican campaign arm, said in a statement. “This is a Republican seat and will remain a Republican seat as Nancy Pelosi and senior House Democrats continue peddling their radical conspiracy theories and pushing their radical cancel culture.”

Boebert’s campaign manager, Sherronna Bishop, said the campaign was ignoring the headlines tying the candidate to the QAnon conspiracy.

“We know exactly what we’re about, and that’s the Constituti­on and freedom,” Bishop said. “We are not into conspiracy theories.”

The QAnon theory has ricocheted around the darker corners of the internet since late 2017. It is based around an anonymous, high-ranking government official known as “Q” who purportedl­y tears back the veil on the “deep state,” often tied to satanism, child molestatio­n and even cannibalis­m.

Trump has retweeted QAnon-promoting accounts. Followers flock to Trump’s rallies wearing clothes and hats with QAnon symbols and slogans.

Republican voters may not know the details of the theory, but they’ve become more amenable to the notion of conspiraci­es because Trump exploited them during his own campaign and administra­tion, said Joseph Uscinski, a political scientist at the University of Miami who studies conspiracy theories.

“Just as that worked for him, there are going to be copycats, too,” he said.

Uscinski stressed that Democrats also believe in conspiracy theories — he cited Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ insistence that the 1% run politics and that his 2016 losses in Democratic presidenti­al primaries showed the system was “rigged.”

And Uscinski said there’s nothing in the QAnon theory that’s inherently conservati­ve, and Boebert was nowhere near as enthusiast­ic about it as other candidates.

For example, Perkins, the GOP’s Senate nominee in Oregon, repeated the QAnon oath in a recent video. She took down a video backing the movement, then said she’d been duped by her own campaign staff and supported it again.

Still, Perkins has almost no chance in reliably Democratic Oregon. Boebert is running in a seat that leans Republican and stands the best chance of any of the candidates who have flirted with QAnon to end up in Congress.

“I shouldn’t have to guess if my congresspe­rson believes in satanic, baby-eating child molesters,” Uscinski said.

Boebert owns Shooters Grill, where servers carry handguns in the aptly named western Colorado town of Rifle. She ended up on Fox News after confrontin­g Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Beto O’Rourke in a Denver suburb last year over his plans to confiscate assault-style rifles.

Boebert’s sole known comments on QAnon came during a May interview with internet journalist Ann Vanderstee­l, whose site highlights other conspiracy theories. Vanderstee­l asked Boebert what she thought of “the Q movement.”

Boebert said she knew about it from her mother, who was “a little fringe.” Pressed, she added, “If this is real, it could be really great for our country.”

Some Republican candidates have referred to the conspiracy theory in social media posts but say they’re not believers. Angela Stanton-King, the GOP’s nominee in Georgia’s solidly Democratic 5th Congressio­nal District, said in a statement that a post linking to a QAnon video on Instagram that begins: “This would explain why they tried so hard to make us hate him” was just questionin­g the movement. She also said that her use of QAnon hashtags in tweets didn’t mean she was an adherent, explaining she peppers her social media with various hashtags to extend her reach.

The QAnon theory is based around an anonymous government official who purportedl­y tears back the veil on the “deep state,” often tied to satanism, child molestatio­n and even cannibalis­m.

 ?? MCKENZIE LANGE/THE GRAND JUNCTION DAILY SENTINEL ?? Lauren Boebert waits for GOP primary returns Tuesday in Colorado. Boebert defeated five-term Rep. Scott Tipton.
MCKENZIE LANGE/THE GRAND JUNCTION DAILY SENTINEL Lauren Boebert waits for GOP primary returns Tuesday in Colorado. Boebert defeated five-term Rep. Scott Tipton.

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