President Donald Trump said he knows “nothing” about QAnon during NBC’s Town Hall, despite previously describing them as “people that love our country” and frequently promoting accounts linked to the conspiracy theory on Twitter.
Trump has been criticized after he failed to denounce or even criticize the movement, which believes Trump is secretly fighting a “deep state” satanic pedophile ring involving high-profile Democrats, when pressed to do so by host Savannah Guthrie.
As noted by Media Matters, this was not the first time that Trump has either retweeted or replied to an account on Twitter with ties to QAnon.
As of October 15, Trump is reported to have promoted QAnon accounts to his 87.2 million followers at least 258 times from around 150 individual accounts.
Notable examples include several retweets from Jack Posobiec, the alt-right figurehead who helped spread the “Pizzagate” conspiracy theory, which also has ties to QAnon.
“The President is retweeting a bunch of conspiracy theorists. I am pointing this out because we shouldn’t accept it as normal, Congressman David Cicilline tweeted at the time in March 2019.
Other notable examples include the now-suspended account @The_Trump_Train and the @MAGAPILL account, which have been known to promote the theory.
In April and May 2019, Trump was also found to have retweeted multiple accounts of QAnon supporters, some of whom had #QAnon in their bios or #WWG1WGA— an abbreviation of the QAnon slogan “Where we go one we go all.”
In March 2019, Trump also retweeted a video from an account called Deep State Exposed, which regularly posts Islamophobic conspiracy theories, before retweeting the account again in May of that year.
In July 2019, Trump tagged pro-QAnonaccount @Voteridplease in one of his tweets while discussing the need to “insure the safety and sanctity of our voting system.” The account frequently tweeted support of the QAnon movement and had the “Where We Go One We Go All” slogan in its banner before it was suspended.
Today Trump retweeted an old tweet from Lisa Mei Crowley, a QAnon pusher who has screenshots of Q drops in her Twitter header image.
This is the sixth or so time that Trump has retweeted a QAnon account. I stopped keeping track tbh. pic.twitter.com/ulqg99974A
The account Trump retweeted (@Lrihendry) to indicate he hates John McCain is a bigoted pizzagate conspiracy theorist who suggested Obama is a pedophile pic.twitter.com/yJGoGSRChu
In August 2020, Trump spoke publicly about QAnon, saying he only really knows its supporters as “people that love our country,” and who “like me very much.”
When asked at the White House briefing about the theory that he is saving the world from satanic pedophiles, Trump responded: “Is that supposed to be a bad thing? If I can help save the world from problems I’m willing to do it, I’m willing to put myself out there.”
QAnon was listed by the FBI as a domestic terror threat in August 2019.
The White House has been contacted for comment.
President Donald Trump gestures as he speaks during an NBC News town hall event at the Perez Art Museum in Miami on October 15, 2020. Brendan Smialowski/Getty