Skip to main content
The Latest

The InfoWars Candidate: How Donald Trump Is Broadcasting Conservative Misinformation

Hardly a week goes by without Donald Trump championing a new conspiracy theory(link is external), often qualifying his claims by saying that he is just asking a question (link is external) or repeating what he heard or read(link is external) from an unnamed source.

So it wasn’t too surprising to see Trump allege yesterday that the general election may be “rigged”(link is external) and claim today that “there’s something phony(link is external)” about polls which show him trailing Hillary Clinton.

Trump’s warning that the election will be stolen and that the polls are deliberately suppressing his level of public support came just days after his confidant Roger Stone(link is external) and conspiracy theorist radio host Alex Jones(link is external) similarly claimed that Clinton plans to rob Trump of the election and that her allies in the media are skewing polls against him so people won’t notice it when the election gets stolen.

The typical path that a bizarre or dubious story takes to get from the cesspool of the far-right fringe media to the mouth of a GOP politician goes something like this: A fringe right-wing outlets like Jones’ InfoWars or WorldNetDaily will report a “fact” that will then get picked up by conservative talk radio hosts, who either use the story in its entirety or refine it a bit. The story then makes its way to Fox News and, from there, to leading GOP politicians and even presidential candidates.

But not for Trump.

Rather than wait for them to percolate up through the right-wing media, Trump takes conspiracy theories straight from the source, often picking up bizarre claims directly from outlets like InfoWars(link is external)WorldNetDaily(link is external)Freedom Outpost(link is external), or even email chains(link is external) and the National Enquirer(link is external):

And hes proud of it.

Trump has appeared alongside Alex Jones(link is external), hailing the unhinged radio conspiracy theorist’s “amazing(link is external)” reputation.

He rejoiced(link is external) at the news that WorldNetDaily — the site whose “reporting” he has cited to in his birther accusations(link is external) against President Obama — named him its 2015 Man of the Year(link is external).

Trump has also made clear that he believes everything he reads in the National Enquirer because if what the grocery store tabloid publishes isn’t true, they can get sued(link is external).

He often boasts, while making one or another outrageous claim, that he has(link is external) the(link is external) best(link is external) sources(link is external).

We can only wonder what will happen when Trump reads Infowars’ and WorldNetDaily’s coverage of such topics as false flag attacks(link is external) or Obama’s “real” father(link is external).