QAnon Casts a Shadow Over Local Governments

The conspiracy theory has gained followers among state and local governments nationwide

Andrea González-Ramírez
GEN

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Illustration: Rob Dobi for GEN

Life in the small coastal town of Sequim, Washington, was upended last summer when Mayor William Armacost loudly and unapologetically promoted the QAnon conspiracy theory on a local radio broadcast. Six months later, in the aftermath of the U.S. Capitol insurrection, Armacost denied he “endorsed” QAnon. And yet, he had called it a “truth movement” and shared posts related to the conspiracy theory on social media. Residents, a majority of whom voted for President Joe Biden in the 2020 election, were deeply alarmed by his refusal to disavow a fringe and dangerous conspiracy theory, one the FBI has labeled a domestic terrorism threat, and his subsequent efforts to push his critics out of government.

In normal times, publicly supporting the false belief that our government is secretly run by a global cabal of sex-trafficking, blood-drinking, baby-eating pedophile and Satanist elites who can only be stopped by a former president would end the careers of anyone in politics and public service. But it hasn’t been “normal times” for a while now, which has allowed a small number of Republicans up and down the ballot to latch on to QAnon.

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