San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

WALMART, AMAZON DONATE TO QANON SPREADER

Tennessee lawmaker with corporate backing promoted theory online

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Walmart, Amazon and other corporate giants donated money to the re-election campaign of a Tennessee state lawmaker who had used social media to amplify and promote the Qanon conspiracy theory, according to an Associated Press review of campaign finance records and the candidate’s posts.

The corporate support for a Qanon-promoting politician is another example of how the conspiracy theory has penetrated mainstream politics, spreading beyond its origins on Internet message boards popular with right-wing extremists.

Dozens of Qanon-promoting candidates have run for federal or state offices during this election cycle. Collective­ly, they have raised millions of dollars from thousands of donors. Individual­ly, however, most of them have run poorly financed campaigns with little or no corporate or party backing. Unlike state Rep. Susan Lynn, who chairs the Tennessee House finance committee, few are incumbents who can attract corporate PAC money.

Though she repeatedly posted a well-known Qanon slogan on her Twitter and Facebook accounts, Lynn told the AP in an interview Friday that she does not support the conspiracy theory.

Walmart did not respond to repeated requests for comment made by email and through its website. An Amazon spokeswoma­n declined to comment. A spokeswoma­n for another donor to Lynn’s campaign, Kentucky-based distillery company Brown-forman, which has a facility in Tennessee, said the company didn’t know about Lynn’s Qanon posts and wouldn’t have donated to her campaign through its Jack Daniel’s PAC if it had.

“Now that our awareness is raised, we will reevaluate our criteria for giving to help identify affiliatio­ns like this in the future,” Elizabeth Conway said in a statement.

Corporate PAC managers typically decide which candidates to support on the basis of narrow, pragmatic policy issues rather than broader political concerns, said Anthony Corrado, a Colby College government professor and campaign finance expert.

“In many instances, you don’t have any kind of corporate board oversight or any kind of accountabi­lity in terms of review of contributi­ons before they’re made,” Corrado said. “Some corporatio­ns now have adopted policies about the supervisio­n of PAC contributi­ons because of the reputation­al risks involved in this.”

At least 81 current or former congressio­nal candidates have supported the conspiracy theory or promoted Qanon content, with at least 24 qualifying for November’s general election ballot, according to the liberal watchdog Media Matters for America.

As of Friday, the candidates collective­ly had raised nearly $5 million in contributi­ons for this election cycle, but only eight had raised more than $100,000 individual­ly, according to the AP’S review of Federal Election Commission data. The FEC’S online database doesn’t have any fundraisin­g reports for 30 of the candidates, the majority of whom are running as Republican­s.

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