CNN’s chief knowledge analyst Harry Enten on Tuesday revealed how right-wing conspiracy theories, like these tied to Jeffrey Epstein, have contributed to President Donald Trump’s reputation and, as of late, have fueled backlash over his administration’s dealing with of information tied to the late convicted intercourse offender.
“Donald Trump, from the very starting, has been pushing conspiracy theories over and again and again, and he has benefited from them traditionally,” declared Enten in a phase with CNN’s Sara Sidner. “And now, lastly, it’s coming again to truly chew him.”
Epstein conspiracy theories have swirled round MAGA world through the years, with Trump supporters believing that the disgraced financier — who died in 2019 whereas awaiting trial on intercourse trafficking expenses — stored a so-called “shopper record” to blackmail influential figures.
His supporters have additionally fueled conspiracy theories that Epstein was murdered and didn’t die by suicide.
The Justice Division and the FBI have indicated that Epstein was not murdered and didn’t have such an inventory, findings that sparked outrage among Trump supporters after they contradicted previous claims by his officers.
In his phase on CNN, Enten highlighted QAnon’s important help for Trump in final 12 months’s election and emphasised that the president wouldn’t have gained with out the motion’s followers backing him.
Registered voters who believed QAnon conspiracy theories most popular Trump over then-Vice President Kamala Harris by a margin of +61 (those that most popular the president minus those that most popular Harris) in a ballot by nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute taken roughly two months earlier than the election.
The identical ballot discovered registered voters who rejected or doubted such conspiracy theories most popular Harris over Trump by a margin of +16.
He then pointed to previous polls indicating that registered GOP voters and GOP-leaning independents who picked Trump as their alternative for the 2024 and 2016 Republican presidential nominee have sided primarily with conspiracy theories he has pushed through the years.
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Enten argued that Trump pushing the speculation to his supporters helped him “stand up from the lifeless” following his election loss that 12 months and the lethal Jan. 6, 2021 revolt.