2024
Elections
Elon Musk
is piling onto all the hurricane disinformation, hampering relief efforts
The
billionaire is using the power of his social media platform to spread
falsehoods that officials say are hampering recovery efforts.
By Adam Aton
and Scott Waldman
10/08/2024
04:39 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/10/08/elon-musk-hurricane-disinformation-trump-00182769
Elon Musk is
using his social media network to spread election conspiracy theories about
U.S. disasters — just as online falsehoods are complicating the federal
response to Hurricanes Helene and Milton.
Musk has
helped spread accusations that the Federal Emergency Management Agency
“actively blocked” donations to victims of Helene and is “seizing goods … and
locking them away to state they are their own” — allegations that FEMA
officials call false and which run afoul of state and local Republican leaders’
praise for the assistance from Washington.
On his
social network, X, Musk also amplified rumors that authorities in North
Carolina had “taken control to stop people helping” stricken residents and
accusations that sheriffs were threatening to arrest FEMA staff “if they hinder
rescue and aid work.” Many of his allegations centered on the claim that
immigrants had already depleted federal disaster funds, which FEMA has said is
untrue.
“FEMA used
up its budget ferrying illegals into the country instead of saving American
lives. Treason,” Musk wrote without evidence on X, where he interspersed
messages about hurricane damage with political attacks on Democrats.
Besides
owning X, Musk is the world’s richest person, the CEO of Tesla and the chief
executive of SpaceX, a federal contractor that is using its Starlink satellite
service to restore communications to communities cut off by Helene’s massive
flood damage in the Southeast. He’s also a top donor to former President Donald
Trump, who has been using his own social media network to level baseless claims
that President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are “going out of
their way to not help people in Republican areas.”
Without
mentioning Musk or Trump, FEMA leaders said Tuesday that misinformation is
causing problems for Helene survivors, some of whom are being dissuaded from
seeking help. They said it’s also harming emergency responders, whose morale
has taken a hit amid threats to their safety.
The wave of
false conspiracy theories “is absolutely the worst I have ever seen,” FEMA
Administrator Deanne Criswell told reporters on a Tuesday morning call. The
agency has long had a rumor control page to combat the kind of scams that often
flourish after a disaster, she added. “I anticipated some of this, but not to
the extent that we’re seeing.”
“It’s just
really unfortunate that [people] continue to try to create this level of fear
in these communities that is impeding our ability to do our job at the level
that we need to do it, but we’re not going to let it deter us,” Criswell added.
“We are going to continue to be in these communities and support them for
whatever they need.”
FEMA and
other agencies are assisting residents in states including Florida, Georgia and
North Carolina after Helene swept through nearly two weeks ago. They’ll be
doing the same again in Florida after Milton makes landfall Wednesday.
Republicans
such as North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis have also called for an end to
commentators spreading rumors and conspiracy theories.
“Many of
these observations are not even from people on the ground,” Tillis said Sunday
on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “I believe that we have to stay focused on rescue
operations, recovery operations, clearing operations, and we don’t need any of
these distractions on the ground. It’s at the expense of the hard-working first
responders and people that are just trying to recover their lives.”
Harris
accused Trump and his allies of “playing political games” while lives are still
at risk from storm damage.
“It’s
profound and it is the height of irresponsibility and frankly callousness,” she
said Tuesday on “The View.”
Musk’s
misinformation campaign comes in the heat of the presidential election and
includes political attacks as two of this year’s most pivotal swing states
grapple with Helene’s aftermath — and as Florida prepares for what could be an
even more cataclysmic landfall by Hurricane Milton on Wednesday.
Federal
officials warned that Milton would bring life-threatening storm surge to large
swaths of Florida’s vulnerable west coast, with the first tropical storm force
winds arriving on land as early as Wednesday morning. The Category 4 storm
clocked in at 155 mph as of Tuesday afternoon. It has already set a record as
the third-fastest intensifying tropical cyclone on record, National Weather
Service Director Ken Graham told reporters Monday in a call.
The biggest
worries include concerns about Milton’s predicted path into or near Tampa Bay,
a region of more than 3 million people that hasn’t suffered a direct strike
from a major hurricane since 1921. Losses from such a storm could total
hundreds of billions of dollars, regional planners have warned.
“It’s a very
serious situation,” Graham said.
Counties up
and down the Florida Gulf Coast have ordered mandatory evacuations, amid
forecasts that Milton could bring 10 to 15 feet of storm surge into communities
still recovering from Helene’s deluge less than two weeks ago. Many of those
survivors will face a massive challenge to rebuilding their homes and lives
after they return.
Falsehoods
about natural disasters complicate the logistics of disaster response, which
can hinge on survivors cooperating with a patchwork of authorities, the FEMA
leaders said this week. They warned that conspiracy theories have already
hampered the work of rescue and recovery.
Keith Turi,
FEMA’s acting associate administrator for response and recovery, ticked through
false rumors — that FEMA was “confiscating supplies” or only providing $750 in
total assistance to storm victims — that he said are already harming the
agency’s ability to help survivors.
“The
misinformation is extremely damaging to the response efforts from Helene and
from any disaster,” he said. “It is reducing the likelihood that survivors will
come to FEMA in a trusting way to register for assistance.”
Turi said
governors, many of whom in the affected area are Republican, have helped cut
through some of the inaccuracies. “We’ve had nothing but positive engagement
with them and coordination and also recognition that we all need to work
together for combating misinformation and making sure that everybody has the
best information that they need,” he said.
With
hard-hit areas cut off from communications and authentic accounts of disaster
response limited, Musk and other far-right figures are using misinformation and
conspiracies to fill the void, said Michael Rothschild, a conspiracy theory
expert and author of the book “The Storm Is Upon Us: How QAnon Became a
Movement, Cult, and Conspiracy Theory of Everything.”
“No one else
is telling you anything, so you’re going with the information that is being put
in front of you and that already kind of ties into the things that you already
believe,” Rothschild said. “So if you already believe that the federal
government is corrupt and that Kamala Harris would put her thumb on the scale
to interfere with disaster relief efforts to kill off Trump voters, well,
you’re going to share things that reaffirm that belief.”
Musk has
primed an enormous audience to think of him as a “forbidden truth-teller” so
his falsehoods quickly become amplified, Rothschild said.
‘What we
found out was actually happening’
Republicans,
Democrats and nonpartisan officials have pushed back on the claims from Musk —
as well those from Trump, who has gone even further and falsely accused
Democrats of blocking aid to Republican-leaning areas. GOP officials in those
areas say federal agencies and officials have been in close contact.
Musk’s
amplification of conspiracies comes as he prepares to hit the campaign trail
for Trump in the next month before November’s election, with a focus on
Pennsylvania.
FEMA has
issued official responses to some conspiracy theories, including the claim
repeated by Musk and Trump that the agency ran out of money due to migrants:
“This is false. No money is being diverted from disaster response needs.”
North
Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, slammed both Trump and Musk for spreading
conspiracy theories and false claims.
“As we
continue our unprecedented response to Hurricane Helene, the nation is
beginning to understand that impacted areas have been the target of a
relentless vortex of disinformation, dialed up by bad actors and platforms like
X,” Cooper wrote on Musk’s social network. “Politicians, billionaires and
grifters who peddle lies during a time of crisis should be held accountable.”
On Friday,
after Musk complained that “belligerent government incompetence” by FEMA and
the Federal Aviation Administration was halting helicopter deliveries of
Starlink devices, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg tweeted in response:
“No one is shutting down the airspace and FAA doesn’t block legitimate rescue
and recovery flights.” He also invited Musk to “give me a call.”
Buttigieg
later chalked up Musk’s comments to a misunderstanding over the process of
flying into a disaster zone.
“What we
found out was actually happening was the FAA was not closing down any
airspace,” Buttigieg said Sunday on MSNBC. “But there was an issue with pilots
who were helping get Starlink equipment to where it needed to be, having the
right information. We worked that out with local authorities and were able to
take care of it.”
After their
conversation Friday, Musk thanked Buttigieg on X: “Just wanted to note that Sec
Buttigieg is on the ball.” And in a Monday interview with Tucker Carlson on X,
Musk credited Buttigieg with waiving “insane” flight planning requirements.
“I want to
give Buttigieg some credit here,” Musk said. “When I complained about it, he
reacted in a very levelheaded way. And he reached out to me, and he called me.
And we discussed the issue, got to the bottom of it, and he fixed it.”
Musk and X
did not respond to a request for comment.
A
Transportation Department official, granted anonymity to speak candidly about
the exchange, suggested that Buttigieg did not intervene personally to clear
the way for the flights. Rather, the official said that the chat was mostly
walking Musk through how the flight restrictions and airport closures work and
providing him with information for whom he could contact.
The FAA has
a system of notices that tell pilots — who are supposed to check these notices
before flying — where they can and can’t fly. Pilots with legitimate relief
business can request to fly there anyway, a process that had been
well-established by the time Musk tweeted.
Becca
Gallas, director of North Carolina’s Department of Transportation aviation
division, said coordination among multiple agencies to manage the flight
restrictions and notification requirements had been going on “well in advance
of any external influence.”
Gallas said
NCDOT did not change those procedures or clear any bureaucratic red tape to
enable the Starlink and supply relief flights.
‘Stop this
junk’
Internationally,
Musk and his social media company have faced penalties for what other
governments have described as disinformation and hate speech.
Brazil’s top
court this year banned X from the country after the company allegedly failed to
deactivate accounts that spread illegal disinformation and hate speech. After
disputing that order as an attack on free speech, X removed some accounts and
is trying to get the ban lifted.
The European
Union has also charged X with violating the bloc’s social media laws, accusing
it of facilitating disinformation designed to mislead the public.
In the U.S.,
some Republican state lawmakers have pleaded for conservative influencers to
resist spreading falsehoods.
“PLEASE help
stop this junk,” GOP North Carolina state Sen. Kevin Corbin implored his
Facebook followers on Oct. 3, citing false stories such as Antarctic weather
control, land grabs over lithium and FEMA stealing donations.
A fellow
lawmaker had received 15 calls in one day about untrue rumors, he added. “I’m
growing a bit weary of intentional distractions,” Corbin said.
The next
day, Musk reposted some of those same falsehoods to his 200 million followers,
with one word: “Wow.”
Zack Colman,
Oriana Pawlyk and Mike Lee contributed to this report.
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