How the
QAnon Movement Entered Mainstream Politics — And Why They're Silent on the
Epstein Files
Some view
it as a betrayal of Trump to fulfill one of his most significant promises.
By Art
Jipson, University of Dayton
National
News Published: July 21, 2025
https://katiecouric.com/news/national-news/qanon-response-trump-not-releasing-epstein-files/
The
Justice Department asked a federal court on July 18, 2025, to unseal grand jury
transcripts in Jeffrey Epstein’s case. The direction from President Donald
Trump came after weeks of frustration among some far-right groups over his
administration’s refusal to release the complete and unredacted “Epstein
files.”
Epstein,
a wealthy financier with high-profile connections, was arrested in 2019 on sex
trafficking charges and later died by suicide in a Manhattan jail awaiting
trial.
In early
2025, a federal court unsealed portions of the court documents. While names of
some of the alleged clients and victims were released, many were redacted or
withheld.
Epstein’s
arrest and death became a central focus for QAnon followers, who saw the events
as proof of a hidden global elite engaged in child trafficking and protected by
powerful institutions. The release — or withholding — of the Epstein files is
often cited within QAnon circles as evidence of a broader cover-up by the
so-called “deep state.
Some
followers of the MAGA — Make America Great Again — movement and the Republican
Party believe in the false claim that the United States is secretly controlled
by a cabal of elites who are pedophiles, sex traffickers, and satanists.
Over
time, what started as a baseless conspiracy on obscure platforms migrated into
the mainstream. It has influenced rhetoric and policy debates, and even
reshaped the American political landscape. The foundational belief of many of
the QAnon followers is that Trump is a heroic figure fighting the elite
pedophile ring.
Trump’s
attempts at downplaying or obstructing the very disclosures they believe would
validate their worldview have led to confusion. To some, the delay in the
release of the files feels like a betrayal, or even the possibility of his
wrongdoing. Others are trying to reinterpret Trump’s actions through
increasingly baseless conspiracy logic.
Trump has
publicly dismissed demands for the full release of the Epstein Files and
referred to much-hyped records as a “hoax.” He has also made false claims. On
July 15, 2025, Trump said: “And I would say that, you know, these files were
made up by Comey. They were made up by Obama.”
As a
scholar who studies extremism, I know that the movement views Trump as a
mythological figure and it interprets Trump’s actions to fit this overarching
narrative — an elasticity that makes the movement both durable and dangerous.
The QAnon
movement began with the Pizzagate conspiracy theory in 2016, which falsely
claimed that high-ranking Democrats were operating a child sex trafficking ring
out of a Washington, D.C., pizzeria. The baseless theory gained enough online
momentum that a man armed with an assault rifle stormed the restaurant, seeking
to “free the children.”
In 2017,
an anonymous figure called “Q” began posting cryptic messages on message boards
like 4chan and 8kun. The baseless accusations of a global network of elites
involved in controlling global institutions, including governments, businesses,
and the media, as well as operating a child trafficking and ritual abuse, were
central to the QAnon movement’s narrative.
The
movement has recruited followers through language like “Save the Children,” to
mobilize around issues of child trafficking.
Many
QAnon adherents, particularly women, were drawn to the movement through such
appeals to child protection. According to psychologists Sophia Moskalenko,
Ph.D., and Mia Bloom, Ph.D., this type of appeal taps into powerful emotional
instincts, making conspiracy theories like QAnon more persuasive and harder to
dislodge, even in the face of contradictory evidence.
QAnon
movement’s rise
QAnon
followers perceived Trump as a messianic figure working to expose this cabal in
a climactic reckoning known as “The Storm” – a moment when mass arrests would
finally bring justice.
They
claimed that this moment would eventually bring about a “Great Awakening,” a
reference to the religious revivalist movements of the 18th and 19th centuries.
In this context, the phrase described the supposed political and spiritual
enlightenment that would follow “The Storm” – a moment of mass realization when
people would “wake up” to the truth about the “deep state.”
In 2019,
the FBI identified QAnon as a domestic terrorism threat, and major social media
platforms began banning related content, but by then, QAnon had bled into
mainstream conservative politics. Q-endorsing candidates, such as Marjorie
Taylor Greene, ran for and won elected office a year later.
During
Trump’s first administration — from 2017 to 2021 — the QAnon movement
flourished. The posts from Q claimed to reveal insider knowledge of a secret
war being waged by the president, often in coordination with the military,
against the powerful elite.
Trump
never explicitly endorsed the movement, but he did little to distance himself
from it.
His
administration also included figures, like former National Security Adviser
Michael Flynn, who openly interacted with Q content online.
Trump’s
rhetoric, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 election, gave
new life to QAnon narratives. When he questioned the integrity of the electoral
process, QAnon followers interpreted it as confirmation of the deep state’s
meddling.
However,
after Trump’s loss to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential race, QAnon followers
revised their original prophecy to maintain belief in “The Storm” and “The
Great Awakening.” Some claimed the defeat was part of a larger secret plan,
with Biden’s presidency serving as a cover for exposing the deep state. Some
believed Trump remained the true president behind the scenes, while others
reframed the awakening as a spiritual rather than political event.
Indeed,
by 2020, several congressional candidates openly embraced or showed sympathy
for the QAnon movement.
At
various campaign rallies in 2022 and after Trump used the movement’s symbolism.
On Truth Social, his social media platform, he retweeted Q-affiliated accounts,
and praised QAnon supporters as “people who love our country.” That same year
he reposted an image of himself wearing a Q lapel pin overlaid with the words
“The Storm is Coming.”
After the
2020 elections
Trump’s
departure from the White House in January 2021 created an existential crisis
for the QAnon movement. Predictions that he would declare martial law or arrest
Joe Biden and other Democrats on Inauguration Day failed to materialize. Q’s
posts also stopped, leaving many followers adrift.
Some
abandoned the theory. Others rationalized the failed predictions or embraced
new conspiracy narratives, such as the belief that Trump was still secretly in
charge or that the military would soon act to reinstate him.
Some
QAnon communities merged with or were absorbed into broader anti-vaccine,
anti-globalist, and Christian nationalist movements.
How big
is the movement?
Estimating
the number of QAnon believers is difficult because many individuals do not
openly identify with the movement, and those who do often hold a range of
loosely connected or partial beliefs rather than adhering to a consistent or
uniform ideology. Not everyone who shares a Q meme or echoes a Q talking point
identifies as being part of the movement.
That
said, surveys by groups like the 2024 Public Religion Research Institute and
the Associated Press have found that 15–20% of Americans believe in some of
QAnon’s core claims, such as the existence of a secret group of
Satan-worshipping elites controlling the government.
Among
Republican voters, the number is often higher.
This does
not mean all these people are hardcore QAnon adherents, but it does show how
far the narrative, or parts of it, has seeped into mainstream thinking.
Epstein
as evidence of "the cabal"
The Trump
administration’s failure to disclose the information in the Epstein files has
fueled internal confusion, disillusionment, and even radicalization within the
movement.
For some
QAnon believers, this failure was a turning point: If Trump — once seen as the
hero in the conspiracy narrative — would not or could not reveal the truth,
then the “deep state” must be more entrenched than imagined.
At the
same time, frustrations have grown within MAGA and the QAnon movement’s spaces.
Some see it as a failure to fulfill one of his most important promises:
exposing elite pedophiles. Others believe the delay is strategic, another
example of “the plan” requiring more patience.
The QAnon
movement continues to evolve, even as its central figure hedges and hesitates,
illustrating the potency of myths in times of uncertainty. In my view,
understanding why this belief persists is essential for comprehending the
current state of American democracy.
Art
Jipson, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Dayton

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