As nationwide protests over the killing of George Floyd and police brutality continue, right-wing and white supremacist groups are reportedly taking advantage of the situation to incite violence in cities across the country. But Fox personalities have been focusing on the police narrative that the protesters are violent to justify police's use of excessive force and violence against peaceful protesters, and they have relentlessly hyped up the supposed threats posed by antifa -- shorthand for anti-fascist activists.
Fox has also given a platform to conspiracy theories about the protests, including that Democratic donor George Soros is funding them and that antifa are allegedly stashing piles of bricks and other objects near protest sites to harm police officers.
The resulting effect has likely left many Fox viewers fearing the supposedly tyrannical antifa. President Donald Trump is clearly taking advantage of this fearmongering as he has railed against the vaguely defined movement to justify military action and attack his political enemies.
The narrative that antifa are behind the violence at protests has caused panic in small towns across the U.S., where residents have gathered to defend their homes from attacks that never happen. NBC reported that in Klamath Falls, Oregon, hundreds of armed residents gathered because they “heard that antifa, paid by billionaire philanthropist George Soros, were being bused in from neighboring cities, hellbent on razing their idyllic town.” (When no one showed up, the residents declared victory.)
In reality, recent reporting has shown that right-wing and white supremacist groups are posing as protesters to incite violence across the country. In Denver, a large number of weapons were seized from an adherent of the extremist “boogaloo” movement -- which advocates for a second civil war -- and three people were arrested in Las Vegas on terror charges for their involvement in a right-wing conspiracy to incite violence at protests. In Minnesota, officials found links between looters and white supremacist groups. Multiple outlets have reported that boogaloo supporters and other white supremacist groups are posing as antifa on the internet in order to sow chaos and violence.
Still, Fox News has been echoing Trump and the Justice Department’s push to blame antifa for the violence -- or otherwise paint the nationwide protests as overwhelmingly destructive --while obscuring the role of white supremacists and far-right actors in trying to spark violence at the protests. Many Fox segments have also responded to the controversy at Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., where U.S. Park Police appeared to tear-gas a crowd of peaceful protesters on June 1 to allow for Trump to take a photo in front of a nearby church, by echoing Attorney General Bill Barr and the police’s widely disputed assertions that protesters were violent and that tear gas was never used to disperse the crowd.
- In his opening monologue on June 2, Fox prime-time host Tucker Carlson warned that soon, “violent young men with guns will be in charge.” He continued: “They will make the rules, including the rules in your neighborhood. They will do what they want. You will do what they say. No one will stop them. You will not want to live here when that happens.”