Claimed he won the popular vote during the
2016 presidential election, saying "I think there was tremendous cheating in California, there was tremendous cheating in New York and other places".[36]
Claims of corrupt science, medicine, and statistics
Global warming conspiracy theory, claimed that "The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive."[38]
Vaccines cause autism, tweeted "Healthy young child goes to doctor, gets pumped with massive shot of many vaccines, doesn't feel good and changes - AUTISM. Many such cases!"
[1] Tweeted, "I am being proven right about massive vaccinations—the doctors lied. Save our children & their future" and that parents "know far better than fudged-up reports."[41] At Republican debate, claimed "Just the other day, two years old, 2½ years old, a child, a beautiful child went to have the vaccine, and came back, and a week later got a tremendous fever, got very, very sick, now is autistic."[42]
Tweeted infographic falsely stating that whites killed by blacks constitute 81% of crime, citing the nonexistent “Crime Statistics Bureau — San Francisco”[44]
Donald Trump has encouraged individuals who spread conspiracy theories.
Had dinner with
Kanye West after he had promoted anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and had vowed to go "death [sic] con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE". His dinner guest was
Nick Fuentes, a well-known
Holocaust denier.[53][54][55]
Laura Loomer,[64] who has made false claims about several U.S. mass shootings, including that they were affiliated with
ISIS or that the shootings were entirely staged[65][66][67]
Sidney Powell, an attorney who joined the Trump legal team in 2020, although the team distanced itself from her after she publicly claimed that the 2020 election had been rigged by an elaborate international communist plot.[68] She filed and lost four federal cases, alleging voter fraud of "biblical" proportions and claiming that voting machines had been secretly programmed to switch votes from Trump to Biden.[69][70][71]
Rudy Giuliani, the former
Mayor of New York City during the
September 11 attacks, best known in more recent years for his role as Donald Trump's attorney in various lawsuits pertaining to and a leading proponent of conspiracy theories about the
2020 presidential election, such as that between 65,000 and 165,000 ballots in Georgia were illegally cast by underage voters, that between 32,000 and "a few hundred thousand" illegal immigrants voted in Arizona, and that from 8,021 to 30,000 votes in Pennsylvania were cast fraudulently by people voting in the names of deceased persons whose names had yet to be purged from voter rolls.[72]
L. Lin Wood, an attorney who promoted conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election, claiming that Trump had won the election with 70% of the vote, and that a secret cabal of international communists, Chinese intelligence, and Republican officials had contrived to steal the election from Trump.[73][74] Wood also claims that "
no planes" hit the World Trade Center and Pentagon on
September 11, 2001, and that planes visible in the footage are "CGI".[75] He announced that he had "entered the public debate around the 'flat earth' issue", endorsing the
belief that it is flat.[76]
Kelly Townsend, an Arizona Senator sought out Trump in 2011 pushing the Obama birther conspiracy [77][78][79] Townsend along with
Roger Stone associate
Jerome Corsi, Sheriff
Joe Arpaio, and 2020 Maricopa County Sheriff candidate and then chief Arpaio staffer Jerry Sheridan, worked with informant
Dennis Montgomery.[78][80] In 2020, Townsend worked again with
Jerome Corsi claiming the election was stolen from
Donald Trump and emailed Corsi a document of Arizona Senators endorsing Trump electors for Vice President
Pence, in an attempt to overturn the 2020 election.[81] In November 2020, Townsend assisted
Sidney Powell along with her birther conspiracy associate Dennis Montgomery who back in 2011 alleged Hammer and Scorecard was spying and used to hack into government computers and change Obamas birth certificate, and in 2020 with Townsend and Powell shifted his claims stating the supercomputer was being used to hack and flip votes in favor of Biden in 2020, and Townsend was listed as a key witness in Powell's Arizona election fraud case.[82][81][83][84] In the lead up to January 6, 2021, Townsend sponsored a bill that would designate Trump electors to Arizona and promoted the Arizona audit and stolen election claims.[85][86] Townsend has also been a leader of the
anti-vax movement claiming in 2019 that all vaccines are communist.[87]
Rick Wiles, founder of
TruNews was granted press credentials by the
Trump Administration.[88][89] Wiles is known for pushing homophobic and anti-semitic conspiracy theories, including that the
Jews seek to take control of the United States to "kill millions of Christians" and stated, "
9/11 wasn't done by the Muslims. It was done by a wildcard, the Israeli Mossad, that's cunning and ruthless and can carry out attacks on Americans and make it look like Arabs did it."[88][90] In July 2018, during the Trump Administration, he claimed that
Anderson Cooper and
Rachel Maddow were going to lead a "homosexual coup on the White House" that would result in the nationally televised decapitation of the
Trump family on the White House lawn.[91]
^Wilson, Jason (May 24, 2017).
"How rightwing pundits are reacting to the Manchester attack". The Guardian. Retrieved June 3, 2017. Paul Joseph Watson, Alex Jones's British mini-me, has followed the same broad path that the rest of the organization has. He was never on the left, of course, but over time his commentary has focused less and less on the Illuminati and chemtrails, and more and more on pushing a stridently anti-Muslim, anti-feminist and anti-left message.
^Sherman, Jake; Palmer, Anna; Ross, Garrett; Okun, Eli (November 19, 2020).
"POLITICO Playbook PM: Rudy". Politico.
Archived from the original on November 20, 2020. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
Claimed he won the popular vote during the
2016 presidential election, saying "I think there was tremendous cheating in California, there was tremendous cheating in New York and other places".[36]
Claims of corrupt science, medicine, and statistics
Global warming conspiracy theory, claimed that "The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive."[38]
Vaccines cause autism, tweeted "Healthy young child goes to doctor, gets pumped with massive shot of many vaccines, doesn't feel good and changes - AUTISM. Many such cases!"
[1] Tweeted, "I am being proven right about massive vaccinations—the doctors lied. Save our children & their future" and that parents "know far better than fudged-up reports."[41] At Republican debate, claimed "Just the other day, two years old, 2½ years old, a child, a beautiful child went to have the vaccine, and came back, and a week later got a tremendous fever, got very, very sick, now is autistic."[42]
Tweeted infographic falsely stating that whites killed by blacks constitute 81% of crime, citing the nonexistent “Crime Statistics Bureau — San Francisco”[44]
Donald Trump has encouraged individuals who spread conspiracy theories.
Had dinner with
Kanye West after he had promoted anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and had vowed to go "death [sic] con 3 On JEWISH PEOPLE". His dinner guest was
Nick Fuentes, a well-known
Holocaust denier.[53][54][55]
Laura Loomer,[64] who has made false claims about several U.S. mass shootings, including that they were affiliated with
ISIS or that the shootings were entirely staged[65][66][67]
Sidney Powell, an attorney who joined the Trump legal team in 2020, although the team distanced itself from her after she publicly claimed that the 2020 election had been rigged by an elaborate international communist plot.[68] She filed and lost four federal cases, alleging voter fraud of "biblical" proportions and claiming that voting machines had been secretly programmed to switch votes from Trump to Biden.[69][70][71]
Rudy Giuliani, the former
Mayor of New York City during the
September 11 attacks, best known in more recent years for his role as Donald Trump's attorney in various lawsuits pertaining to and a leading proponent of conspiracy theories about the
2020 presidential election, such as that between 65,000 and 165,000 ballots in Georgia were illegally cast by underage voters, that between 32,000 and "a few hundred thousand" illegal immigrants voted in Arizona, and that from 8,021 to 30,000 votes in Pennsylvania were cast fraudulently by people voting in the names of deceased persons whose names had yet to be purged from voter rolls.[72]
L. Lin Wood, an attorney who promoted conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election, claiming that Trump had won the election with 70% of the vote, and that a secret cabal of international communists, Chinese intelligence, and Republican officials had contrived to steal the election from Trump.[73][74] Wood also claims that "
no planes" hit the World Trade Center and Pentagon on
September 11, 2001, and that planes visible in the footage are "CGI".[75] He announced that he had "entered the public debate around the 'flat earth' issue", endorsing the
belief that it is flat.[76]
Kelly Townsend, an Arizona Senator sought out Trump in 2011 pushing the Obama birther conspiracy [77][78][79] Townsend along with
Roger Stone associate
Jerome Corsi, Sheriff
Joe Arpaio, and 2020 Maricopa County Sheriff candidate and then chief Arpaio staffer Jerry Sheridan, worked with informant
Dennis Montgomery.[78][80] In 2020, Townsend worked again with
Jerome Corsi claiming the election was stolen from
Donald Trump and emailed Corsi a document of Arizona Senators endorsing Trump electors for Vice President
Pence, in an attempt to overturn the 2020 election.[81] In November 2020, Townsend assisted
Sidney Powell along with her birther conspiracy associate Dennis Montgomery who back in 2011 alleged Hammer and Scorecard was spying and used to hack into government computers and change Obamas birth certificate, and in 2020 with Townsend and Powell shifted his claims stating the supercomputer was being used to hack and flip votes in favor of Biden in 2020, and Townsend was listed as a key witness in Powell's Arizona election fraud case.[82][81][83][84] In the lead up to January 6, 2021, Townsend sponsored a bill that would designate Trump electors to Arizona and promoted the Arizona audit and stolen election claims.[85][86] Townsend has also been a leader of the
anti-vax movement claiming in 2019 that all vaccines are communist.[87]
Rick Wiles, founder of
TruNews was granted press credentials by the
Trump Administration.[88][89] Wiles is known for pushing homophobic and anti-semitic conspiracy theories, including that the
Jews seek to take control of the United States to "kill millions of Christians" and stated, "
9/11 wasn't done by the Muslims. It was done by a wildcard, the Israeli Mossad, that's cunning and ruthless and can carry out attacks on Americans and make it look like Arabs did it."[88][90] In July 2018, during the Trump Administration, he claimed that
Anderson Cooper and
Rachel Maddow were going to lead a "homosexual coup on the White House" that would result in the nationally televised decapitation of the
Trump family on the White House lawn.[91]
^Wilson, Jason (May 24, 2017).
"How rightwing pundits are reacting to the Manchester attack". The Guardian. Retrieved June 3, 2017. Paul Joseph Watson, Alex Jones's British mini-me, has followed the same broad path that the rest of the organization has. He was never on the left, of course, but over time his commentary has focused less and less on the Illuminati and chemtrails, and more and more on pushing a stridently anti-Muslim, anti-feminist and anti-left message.
^Sherman, Jake; Palmer, Anna; Ross, Garrett; Okun, Eli (November 19, 2020).
"POLITICO Playbook PM: Rudy". Politico.
Archived from the original on November 20, 2020. Retrieved November 19, 2020.