Marjorie Taylor Greene’s association with and promotion of antisemitic conspiracy theories did not end in 2018, as she falsely claimed during a speech on the House floor.
Read MoreMarjorie Taylor Greene has called for the execution of Democratic politicians, and moderates a Facebook group whose members have alluded to “the day of the rope” — a white supremacist fantasy about mass hangings of “race traitors.”
Read MoreRep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) wrote a Facebook post in 2018 suggesting that recent California wildfires were the result of “lasers” controlled by “Rothschild Inc.”
Read MoreHouse Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) laughs off concerns about incoming Republican Congresswomen who have expressed support for the antisemitic QAnon conspiracy theory.
Read MoreTrump praises believers in the antisemitic QAnon conspiracy theory, first as “people who love our country,” and then as “very strongly against pedophilia.”
Read More17 Republicans vote against a House Resolution condemning QAnon, an antisemitic pro-Trump conspiracy theory.
Read MoreTrump shares a list of endorsements that includes an antisemitic QAnon conspiracy theorist
Read MoreThe NRCC donates the maximum amount to an antisemitic and racist QAnon congressional candidate running unopposed in Georgia.
Read More20 congressional candidates who believe in QAnon win their Republican primary elections, and will be on their respective ballot as the Republican nominee in November.
Read MoreLauren Witzke, an antisemitic QAnon believer who associates with white nationalists, wins her Republican Primary in Delaware, making her the GOP candidate for U.S. Senate challenging incumbent Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE).
Read MoreMike Pence was set to attend a fundraiser for the Trump campaign hosted by Montana donors, Caryn and Michael Borland, who have promoted antisemitic QAnon conspiracy theories on social media.
Read MoreDonald Trump, Jr. and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) repeat QAnon-spread disinformation used to target a gay, Jewish legislator
Read MoreTexas Assistant Attorney General, Nick Moutous, is exposed as a QAnon conspiracy theorist who spread Islamophobic and racist attacks online.
Read MoreThe Texas GOP promotes a pro-Trump rally featuring a slogan from the antisemitic QAnon movement.
Read MoreMylinda Mason co-organized an event with the Proud Boys (a white nationalist hate group), QAnon believers (antisemitic conspiracy theorists), and the California Straight Pride Coalition (a white supremacist group whose own leader described it as a “totally peaceful, racist group”), outside of a Planned Parenthood Clinic.
Read MoreThe morning she was slated to speak at the Republican National Convention, Mary Ann Mendoza encouraged her Twitter followers to read an antisemitic thread from a QAnon account who warned of a Jewish conspiracy to “make the goyim destroy each other.”
Read MoreOn the heels of becoming the Republican nominee for U.S. Congress representing GA-14, QAnon conspiracy theroist Marjorie Taylor Greene responds to accusations of antisemitism by falsely accusing Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) of antisemitism, and attacking Jewish donor George Soros with antisemitic tropes.
Read MoreMarjorie Taylor Greene wins her runoff race, making her the Republican candidate for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District. Greene is a QAnon believer who is listed on the SPLC’s Hatewatch database, and has come under fire for posing for photos with — and refusing to disavow — former KKK leader Chester Doles.
Read MoreTrump’s former National Security Advisor takes the QAnon “oath” on Independence Day, pledging his allegiance to the far-right conspiracy theory that fuels antisemitism.
Read MoreRep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ), who has his own history of antisemitism, endorses Delaware Republican Lauren Witzke for U.S. Senate. Witzke is an open QAnon believer, a white nationalist aligned with Michelle Malkin, and her campaign manager Michael Sisco openly holds fascist and antisemitic views.
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