Thursday, November 28, 2024

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QAnon

Meta said it won’t fact-check Trump — just as he was amplifying QAnon on Truth Social

The day before former President Donald Trump announced his 2024 presidential candidacy, he amplified more than 50 posts from QAnon-supporting accounts on Truth Social — many of which contained blatant references to the conspiracy theory and false claims about election fraud. 

This amplification came as Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, revealed that Trump’s political speech would be ineligible for fact-checking once he announced his candidacy, 

On November 15, Meta reportedly sent a memo to its third-party fact-checkers, noting that “if former President Trump makes a clear, public announcement that he is running for office, he would be considered a politician under our program policies” and “political speech is ineligible for fact-checking.” Even as Trump is banned from Meta’s platforms until at least January 2023, the pause on fact-checking him “applies to anything Trump says and false statements made by Trump can be posted to the platform by others.” 

Prior to announcing his presidential bid, Trump repeatedly posted on his alternative social media platform Truth Social and shared posts from other users. In fact, Media Matters found that between November 14 and 15, he amplified at least 50 posts from numerous QAnon-supporting accounts. Many of these posts include explicit references to the harmful QAnon conspiracy theory that has been tied to various acts of real world violence and is considered a potential domestic terror threat by the FBI. 

Several posts also make false claims around election fraud, with one post referring to the January 6 insurrection as when “millions of Americans stood faithfully by President Trump in protest of the stolen election.” QAnon influencers took notice of Trump’s posts and celebrated his acknowledgement, saying he was giving them “encouragement” and his posts are proof that “the plan is on track.”

Trump has previously made nods to and amplified the QAnon conspiracy theory, leaving no reason to believe that he would not do the same if given a platform again on Meta’s social media sites. Since joining Truth Social, Trump has amplified 76 unique QAnon-supporting accounts 279 times. 

Posts with QAnon references 

Several of the Truth Social posts Trump shared include blatant QAnon imagery or references such as the letter “Q,” the number “17” (a reference to Q being the 17th letter in the alphabet), or “the storm” (a reference to a supposed secret plan that will result in Trump’s eventual victory). Some posts included quotes from various posts from Q, known as “Q drops,” and one includes an entire Q drop next to an image of Trump. 

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This article has been archived for your research. The original version from Media Matters for America can be found here.