At least a half-dozen Minnesota Republicans running for state legislative seats in November have promoted the sprawling, false QAnon conspiracy that claims Satanists and pedophiles run the government and that COVID-19 is part of a plot to steal the election.
Once a fringe fiction, QAnon is quickly seeping into mainstream Republican politics as scores of GOP candidates across the country express support for it. Among them are six candidates endorsed by the Minnesota Republican Party for state House and Senate seats from the Iron Range to the metro suburbs.
In some cases, Minnesota candidates have used official social media pages for their campaigns to post slogans in support of QAnon, which the FBI has warned is a conspiracy theory that could inspire domestic terrorism or violence. Some posts include references to a "Great Awakening" or "The Storm," a prophesied reckoning in which elected officials, journalists and other members of "the Deep State" are rounded up for imprisonment or execution.
State Democratic officials have expressed alarm at the prospect that any of the Republicans linked to QAnon could be elected. "It's really dangerous and I would say that any elected official, candidate or political party who embraces these is really, in my opinion, acting against our democratic values and frankly trading in information that could be deadly in some cases," said DFL Chairman Ken Martin.
Julie Dupré, a Republican challenging DFL Sen. Melisa Franzen in the southwest metro suburbs, calls QAnon "a really great information source" and "one of many that I use."
Dupré and five other GOP legislative candidates have expressed various degrees of support for QAnon online, at times enthusiastically encouraging others to join them.
As many as 77 congressional candidates and at least two dozen candidates for state legislatures across the country have been linked to QAnon, which emerged in late 2017. It posits that an anonymous, high-level government official known only as "Q" is regularly leaking information about a satanic "Deep State" linked to pedophilia. Followers believe that nearly four years after President's Trump election, the U.S. government is in the thrall of a cabal that controls world power and that Trump is still engaged in a secret war against them.
Its adherents include a Citigroup executive who was recently placed on leave by the bank after being linked to a QAnon website. The movement gained wider attention last month after Marjorie Taylor Greene won the GOP primary for a U.S. House seat in Georgia. Greene's Democratic opponent has since dropped out of the race, and Greene was invited to the White House for Trump's acceptance speech during the Republican National Convention.