This week, right-wing media have latched onto an Axios report detailing the efforts that a suspected Chinese spy made to get close to U.S. politicians including Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA). According to the report, Swalwell “immediately cut off all ties” when alerted by officials and “has not been accused of any wrongdoing.” Still, conservative media are breathlessly hyping up the story, using the report to call for retribution and investigations against Swalwell and to complain about the lack of mainstream media hype around the story. Right-wing media are also fearmongering about China’s influence in the United States, pushing anti-communist tropes, and warning that U.S. colleges are “easy targets” for foreign intelligence agencies because they are “rife with anti-Americanism.”
On December 8, Axios reported that “a suspected Chinese intelligence operative developed extensive ties with local and national politicians.” The operation involved a Chinese national named Christine Fang, or Fang Fang, who allegedly attempted to gather information about American politicians from 2011-2015 while enrolled as a college student in California. Though U.S. intelligence officials emphasize that the case was still a “big deal,” they reportedly “do not believe Fang received or passed on classified information.” Axios reported that Swalwell was “among the most significant targets,” and “federal investigators became so alarmed by Fang's behavior and activities that around 2015 they alerted Swalwell to their concerns — giving him what is known as a defensive briefing. Swalwell immediately cut off all ties to Fang, according to a current U.S. intelligence official, and he has not been accused of any wrongdoing.”
While the report does provide an insight into the efforts that China has made to infiltrate U.S. politics, right-wing media have turned the report into an indictment of Swalwell and the Democratic Party, despite the fact that foreign spying incidents are relatively common (in 2018, a woman was accused of seeking to infiltrate GOP politics through similar tactics targeting prominent Republicans on behalf of Russia).
Still, many in conservative media are working to spin the story to suggest nefarious wrongdoing on the part of Swalwell and to spread fear about China’s influence on the U.S. Since the story broke on December 8, Fox News has aired over 80 segments discussing Swalwell and China, according to Media Matters’ internal database.
In addition to scandalizing the story, some in conservative media are demanding retribution against Swalwell -- whether in the form of forcing him to resign from Congress, subjecting him to various investigations, or removing him from his position on the House Intelligence Committee -- while others are accusing the mainstream media of insufficiently covering the story. Some right-wing media figures are also using the story to fearmonger about China’s role in the U.S., including sowing suspicions about Chinese students studying at universities.
Scandalizing the report and calling for retribution against Swalwell
- One America News’ Jack Posobiec tweeted that he was “told the unreleased portion of the Swalwell report is far, far worse for the Congressman and he is actively fighting to obstruct its release to the American people.”
- The Daily Wire claimed the story was a “bombshell” and detailed calls from Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) for Swalwell to be “removed from Congress.”
- Turning Point USA’s Benny Johnson tweeted: “BOMBSHELL: Chinese communist spies in bed with Russia-collusion hoaxer” -- a reference to Swalwell’s support of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election.