President Trump claimed at a press conference Wednesday that he doesn't know much about the fringe conspiracy theory QAnon, but that he understands its supporters "like me very much" and that they "love America."
Why it matters:: QAnon is a sprawling internet conspiracy theory that baselessly alleges that a powerful cabal of sex traffickers within the "deep state" is engaged in a global fight to take down Trump. The FBI identified fringe conspiracy theories, like QAnon, as domestic terrorist threats in 2019.
- Marjorie Taylor Greene, a vocal supporter of QAnon, won the Republican nomination in Georgia's deep-red 14th congressional district runoff last week. Trump tweeted his congratulations and called her a "rising star."
- Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) is one of the sole Republicans who have demanded that GOP leaders condemn QAnon now that it has entered the mainstream, with Greene poised to be elected to Congress in November.
What he's saying: "I don't know much about theΒ movement.Β I understand they like me veryΒ much.Β Which I appreciate. ButΒ I don't know much about theΒ movement," Trump said.
- "I have heard that it is gainingΒ in popularity and from what IΒ hear ...Β These are people that don't likeΒ seeing what's going on in placesΒ like Portland, Chicago and NewΒ York and other cities andΒ states."
- "I've heard these are people thatΒ love our country and they just don't like seeing it.Β So I don't know really anythingΒ about it other than they doΒ supposedly like me and they alsoΒ would like to see problems inΒ these areas, like especially in the areas we're talking about, go away."
When informed that the crux of the theory is a belief that he is "secretly saving the world from this Satanic cult of pedophiles and cannibals," Trump responded: "Well I haven't heard that, but is that supposed to be a bad thing or a good thing?"
- "If I can help save the worldΒ from problems, I'm willing to doΒ it.Β I'm willing to put myself out there."
- "And we are actually.Β We're saving the world from aΒ radical left philosophy thatΒ will destroy this country andΒ when this country is gone, theΒ rest of the world would follow."
The big picture: QAnon rose out of the 2016 Pizzagate conspiracy theory and has grown into a decentralized network that analyzes cryptic prophecies dropped in remote online forums by "Q," who claims, without ever offering evidence, to be a Trump administration official with high-level clearance.
- Q maintains President Trump is secretly fighting a child-selling cabal in the U.S., though the conspiracy has spiraled to cover a vast array of claims, from JFK Jr. having faked his death to help Trump behind the scenes to the coronavirus being a hoax or a biological weapon engineered in either case by sinister elites.



