After attacking Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) as manipulative, attention-seeking, and self-centered for sharing details about her experience during the January 6 attack on the Capitol, right-wing media figures are now accusing her of lying about her location in yet another attempt to discredit her story.
On the February 1 livestream, Ocasio-Cortez opened up about the trauma she felt during the siege on the Capitol and urged that those who provoked the attack need to be held accountable, saying, “They’re trying to tell us that it wasn't a big deal. They’re trying to tell us to move on without any accountability, without any truth-telling.” Ocasio-Cortez also spoke about her experience as a sexual assault survivor and, as BuzzFeed News reported, “described how the trauma of one experience can be compounded by another. She also compared the tactics of those who maintained Trump’s lies about the election to those of abusers.”
The backlash from right-wing media figures was swift. As the attacks mounted, some began to argue that Ocasio-Cortez -- who has been a target of right-wing obsession and vitriol since she first came to Congress -- was lying or being overly dramatic about being fearful for her safety on January 6 due to the location of her office building. Ocasio-Cortez pushed back on these claims as the “latest manipulative take on the right.”
This narrative was heightened when Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) cast doubt on Ocasio-Cortez’s retelling, saying that she is “two doors down” from her office and “no insurrectionists stormed our hallway.” Earlier, Mace had told reporters her own story of feeling fear and barricading herself in her office the day of the attack.
The narrative snowballed, and hashtags “#AOClied” and “#AlexandriaOcasioSmollett” -- a reference to actor Jussie Smollett, who faked a hate crime against himself in 2019 -- started trending, fueled by right-wing media personalities like Candace Owens, Sebastian Gorka, and Steven Crowder. Meanwhile, Fox News ran numerous segments claiming Ocasio-Cortez is “facing questions” and “backlash” over her “riot claims.”
The backlash to Ocasio-Cortez’s livestream reveals a deeper pattern of cynical blaming, discrediting, and accusing victims of “weaponizing” their trauma when they speak out. As Danielle Campoamor wrote for NBC News, Ocasio-Cortez’s “Capitol Instagram video backlash reveals myth of the perfect assault victim” and “trying to pretend there is one ‘right way’ to deal with the psychological impact of assault is just another way to delegitimize the experiences of trauma survivors we don’t like.”
Here are some examples of right-wing media doubting that Ocasio-Cortez was in actual danger:
- YouTuber Steve Turley posted a monetized video with the title: “BOMBSHELL! AOC Was NOT in the CAPITOL BUILDING During Riots Like She CLAIMED!!!”
- Turning Point Action’s Ryan Fournier tweeted, “AOC lied about being in the Capitol building during her ‘near death’ experience.’”
- Fox News host Tucker Carlson cast doubt on Ocasio-Cortez’s account, mocking her at length for her “death-defying bravery” and airing a graphic with a map of the Capitol to suggest Ocasio-Cortez was farther from the siege and thus not in danger.