Europe’s QAnon followers embrace US election
conspiracy theories
Online groups have piggybacked on false allegations
that the vote is rigged against Donald Trump
On
websites, some Facebook pages and in Telegram channels, British, French, German
and Italian supporters of QAnon have thrown their weight behind their U.S.
counterparts | Mario Tama/Getty Images
BY MARK
SCOTT
November 6,
2020 1:29 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/europe-qanon-us-election/
Bloggers
railing against the deep state. Online videos warning against the mainstream
media. Digital tirades denouncing a rigged election.
Are these
the latest updates from the United States? Think again.
Europe’s
QAnon movement — based on debunked claims that a deep-state conspiracy is out to
undermine Donald Trump's presidency — is in full effect, pushing online posts
and showering encrypted message groups with claims that Joe Biden is trying to
steal the U.S. election, according to a review of these online discussions by
POLITICO.
On
websites, some Facebook pages and in Telegram channels, British, French, German
and Italian supporters of QAnon have thrown their weight behind their U.S.
counterparts. Their support comes in the form of long tirades, in a variety of
European languages, on the intricacies of the U.S. electoral process. “We can
already see that the dominant media have lied, in the United States as in
Europe and elsewhere in the world,” said one of France’s most-read QAnon
websites.
Similar
narratives have sprouted up in other parts of the European Union. Fringe groups
are similarly promoting false claims, often spread virally online by U.S.
right-wing social media influencers, that the Democratic Party is trying to
steal the presidential election. In a televised press conference from the White
House last night, Trump also promoted these false allegations.
Still, it’s
important to remember a couple of points.
First,
these groups have mostly been removed from the major social networks, so their
already small reach has been diminished. Without a major presence on Facebook,
Europe's QAnon followers have migrated to encrypted messaging groups, some of
which now have tens of thousands of followers and post hundreds of updates
daily on U.S. politics, domestic affairs and the coronavirus.
Second,
it’s hard to tell that the European QAnon followers fully understand the U.S.
electoral college, the complex system by which American voters choose their
president.
Without
deep knowledge of the U.S. democratic system, it’s likely they are merely
parroting their American counterparts, according to Chine Labbé, managing
editor for Europe at NewsGuard, a social media analytics firm that has tracked
the rise of QAnon.
"I
don't think a lot of the Europeans understand how the U.S. system works,"
she said.
While these
EU groups' online footprint remains small, Trump’s potential loss could still
galvanize QAnon across the Continent.
While much
of the Continent dislikes Trump, QAnon followers have latched onto the
president as a potential savior for their own countries' ills, including
demands that he come to Germany to rid them of Chancellor Angela Merkel — whom
these fringe groups accuse of being part of the so-called deep state.
Since the
COVID-19 crisis began, QAnon's followers have also become more sophisticated
and coordinated, sharing memes and piggybacking on existing well-entrenched
networks like the anti-vaccine movement.
Another
major world event, like one the unfolding now in the United States, is another
chance for often disconnected groups to band together around a common cause.
"We
are just witnessing the birth of a new nation and this is just the beginning. A
new world is coming," said one prominent German QAnon website.


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