The Reporter (Vacaville)

Corporate giants donate to lawmaker

- By Michael Kunzelman

Corporate giants donated money to the campaign of a lawmaker who promoted the QAnon conspiracy.

Walmart, Amazon and other corporate giants donated money to the reelection 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 Q Anon-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 Q Anon 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 over $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 vast majority of whom are running as Republican­s.

Congress is virtually certain to have at least one Q Anon-supporting member next year. Marjorie Taylor Greene, whose campaign has raised over $1 million, appeared to be coasting to victory in a deep-red congressio­nal district in Georgia even before her Democratic opponent dropped out of the race.

At the state level, the AP and Media Matters have identified more than two dozen legislativ­e candidates who have expressed some support or interest in Q A non.

QAnon centers on the baseless belief that President Donald Trump is waging a secret campaign against enemies in the “deep state” and a child sex traffickin­g ring run by satanic pedophiles and cannibals. Trump has praised QAnon supporters and often retweets accounts that promote the conspiracy theory.

QAnon has been linked to killings, attempted kidnapping­s and other crimes.

In May 2019, an FBI bulletin mentioning QAnon warned that conspiracy theory-driven extremists have become a domestic terrorism threat.

Lynn said her social media posts do not indicate any support for the conspiracy theory.

“This is the United States of America, and I am absolutely free to tweet or retweet anything I want,” she said. “I don’t understand why this is even an issue. Believe me, I am not in the inside of some QAnon movement.”

But in October 2019, Lynn retweeted posts by QAnonpromo­ting accounts with tens of thousands of followers. One of the posts she retweeted praised Trump and included the hashtag #TheGreatAw­akening, a phrase commonly invoked by QAnon followers.

Between Oct. 31, 2019, and Jan. 9, 2020, her campaign received $4,750 in donations from Amazon.com

Services LLC, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee’s PAC, health insurer Humana, the Southwest Airlines Co. Freedom Fund and Walmart Inc.

“Like many other companies, our PAC periodical­ly contribute­s to elected officials in Tennessee, including those serving in leadership like Rep. Lynn,” BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee spokeswoma­n Dalya Qualls said in a statement.

In April, Lynn updated her Facebook page with a cover photo that included a flag with stars forming a “Q” above the abbreviati­on “WWG1WGA,” which stands for the QAnon slogan “Where we go one, we go all.” In May and June, Lynn punctuated several tweets with the same abbreviati­on.

And when a leading QAnon supporter nicknamed “Praying Medic” tweeted the message, “Is it time to Q the Trump rallies?” Lynn responded, “It is time!” in a May 31 tweet of her own.

 ?? ERIK SCHELZIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On March 15, 2016, Rep. Susan Lynn, R-Mt. Juliet, listens to the testimony during a House subcommitt­ee hearing in Nashville, Tenn.
ERIK SCHELZIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On March 15, 2016, Rep. Susan Lynn, R-Mt. Juliet, listens to the testimony during a House subcommitt­ee hearing in Nashville, Tenn.

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