Donald Trump.Photo: Brandon Bell/Getty

Donald Trump

NewsGuard, which analyzes and rates news outlets on transparency and credibility, identified 88 Truth Social accounts with more than 10,000 followers each that have promoted slogans, graphics and beliefs associated with QAnon.

QAnon is an evolving collection of conspiracy theories that center on the idea that government, media and financial elites are Satan-worshiping pedophiles. Many followers of QAnon believe that Trump and “Q,” an anonymous government official with high-level security clearance, are working to take down the network of famous and powerful child sex-traffickers.

Trump and other Truth Social executives — includingDevin Nunes, a former Republican lawmaker who left the U.S. House of Representatives to become the CEO of Trump’s new platform — regularly boost the QAnon-pushing accounts' content.

Getty

woman at keyboard

In February 2022, after beingbanned from Twitterfollowing the Jan. 6, 2021,attack on the U.S. Capitol, the former president launched Truth Social. He has 3.9 million followers on the platform, where he’s “re-Truthed” (that’s the Truth Social equivalent of retweeting) 30 different QAnon-promoting accounts 65 times since he first posted on the site in April, NewsGuard found.

“He’s not simply President Trump the political leader here — he’s the proprietor of a platform,” Steven Brill, co-chief executive of NewsGuard and founder ofThe American Lawyermagazine, said,The New York Timesreports. “That would be the equivalent of Mark Zuckerberg reposting content from supporters of QAnon.”

In 2019, The FBI identified fringe conspiracy theories like QAnon as adomestic terrorist threat.

Before he was banned from Twitter, Trump promoted QAnon content on the platform, though not as often as he’s done on Truth Social. On July 4, 2020, he retweeted 14 posts from accounts that supported the conspiracy theory.

Jacob Chansley.SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

Jake Angeli

“I’ve heard these are people that love our country,” then-President Trump said during a White House news conference days later. “So I don’t know really anything about it other than they do supposedly like me.”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer.

During the 2020 presidential election, Trump refused to denounce QAnon during a town hall event withTodayanchorSavannah Guthrie.

“Can you just once and for all state that that is completely not true — disavow QAnon?“Guthrie asked Trump.

After saying, “I know nothing about QAnon,” he said, “What I do hear about it is they are very strongly against pedophilia — and I agree with that.”

source: people.com