Right-wing media have spent more than two months telling audiences that November’s election was “stolen” from President Donald Trump and promoting efforts to overturn the results. They’ve presented Trump’s loss as a great injustice and as a wrong that must be righted. Fox News contributor Newt Gingrich went so far as to call Biden’s election “the most dangerous assault on the very nature of America, certainly in our lifetime, and maybe since the previous Civil War.” Right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh has floated the idea of secession.
On Wednesday, that all came to a head when Trump called on his supporters to march on the Capitol -- and they listened. Months of lies and incendiary rhetoric from Trump fueled by his media allies reached its inevitable conclusion: a violent attempt to overthrow democracy.
Rather than take any accountability for how their reckless conspiracies had inspired a riotous mob to storm the Capitol, numerous right-wing media figures pounced on a different conspiracy theory that conveniently allowed conservatives to dodge responsibility: Antifa did it.
All week, conservatives have struggled to coalesce around a coherent narrative about what happened on Wednesday, especially in light of the president’s temporary suspension from his favorite social media platforms.
On one hand, a number of Trump’s most loyal backers on Fox News and elsewhere rushed to defend the insurrectionists. Tucker Carlson urged people to empathize with the perpetrators during his Wednesday show. Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum called the attack “a huge victory” for the pro-Trump forces. Meanwhile, Fox’s Bret Baier, John Roberts, Griff Jenkins, Lou Dobbs, and Mike Tobin all downplayed the afternoon’s events. Laura Ingraham and Fox contributor Katie Pavlich both compared what happened to Black Lives Matter protests.
Former Trump adviser Sebastian Gorka called the rioters “patriots” who “have taken over Capitol Hill.” Newsmax host Rob Schmitt justified the attack by saying that the people involved in it clearly felt “a tremendous amount of frustration” and that he believed it came from “a very, very logical place.”
As time went on, a separate and contradictory narrative emerged: Antifa did it.
“Republicans do not join protest mobs, they do not loot, and they don't riot, to the grand disappointment of many people,” said Rush Limbaugh during his Thursday show. “But a tiny minority of these protesters, and undoubtedly including some antifa Democrat-sponsored instigators, did decide to go to the Capitol to protest.” (At another point during Limbaugh’s show, he did come out with an implicit endorsement of political violence.)
Sean Hannity dipped his toe into the conspiracy theory waters during his Wednesday radio show, pointing to “reports that groups like antifa … were there to cause trouble.”
One popular source of such claims was a viral article from the right-wing Washington Times. That article, which received more than a quarter million engagements on Facebook, was promoted by a smattering of pro-Trump personalities and cited by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) during a speech on the House floor Wednesday evening. That article was debunked and later deleted by The Washington Times.
Proto-Trumpian former Alaska governor and The Masked Singer contestant Sarah Palin promoted this conspiracy theory during a Wednesday Fox News appearance in which she said, “We don’t know who all were the instigators in this, these horrible thing that happen today. I think a lot of it is the Antifa folks. I’ve been sent pictures of the same characters, whom were captured on images today storming the Capitol, as had been in protests on the other side of politics earlier in the summer.”
During an on-air report, Sinclair’s James Rosen said that the crowd of demonstrators had their “ranks likely augmented by far-left infiltrators.” Later, Rosen added, “On social media, images surfaced showing that at least some of the protesters who breached the Capitol were previously photographed earlier this year taking part in BLM and antifa actions as far away as Arizona, the very state whose Electoral College votes were being challenged when the chaos erupted.”
None of what Rosen said was based in fact. Claims of protesters who were “previously photographed earlier this year taking part in BLM and antifa actions” likely referred to Jake Angeli, who calls himself the “QAnon Shaman.” Angeli is a fairly well-known presence at pro-Trump rallies in Arizona and is certainly not “antifa.”
While it’s within the realm of possibilities that not every single person involved in the attack on the Capitol was a dyed-in-the-wool Trump supporter, the people who have actually been identified certainly appear to fit that description. Many Trump supporters went so far as to livestream and photograph themselves taking part in the chaos. To float a conspiracy theory about the attack being somehow driven by leftists is not only cowardly but outright dangerous.
Antifa makes for a convenient boogeyman in this case because the term doesn't refer to a group of people so much as it describes people engaged in tactics to oppose fascism. As FBI Director Chris Wray said during a September hearing, “It’s not a group or an organization. It’s a movement or an ideology.” Placing blame on “antifa” is essentially just a way to employ the “No true Scotsman” fallacy, which is exactly what conservative media figures are doing in making arguments that no true Trump supporter would attack the Capitol.