Like any good right-wing conspiracy-obsessed website, WorldNetDaily hates George Soros After all, its columnists have pushed the false smear that Soros was a Nazi sympathizer during World War II, and it refused to correct the record when it had a chance. So it was unsurprising that WND latched onto dubious claims that a Soros-funded group and, thus, Soros himself — was involved in the migrant caravan moving through Central America and Mexico toward the United States.
Brent Smith ranted in his Oct. 19 WND column: “And who is coaching these marchers? Is it once again Pueblo Sin Fronteras, the George Soros funded group who bankrolled the April 2018 march to the border, or is it Honduran communist Bartolo Fuentes, looking to cause upheaval to regain power in his country?”
An anonymously written Oct. 22 WND article repeated Smith’s speculation, adding speculation from the right-wing American Thinker site claiming that “Evidence of Soros funding of an earlier ‘spontaneous’ migration have been found among the tentacles of support that flow from his Open Society group coffers.”
An Oct. 29 WND article repeated a claim from the highly discredited Gateway Pundit claiming that “the George Soros Open Society is working behind the scenes with the United Nations to assist illegal migrants like the caravans marching to the southern U.S. border.” It also touted a claim from Judicial Watch’s Chris Farrell, who “accused Soros of funding the migrant caravan,” going on to invoke an even more discredited source: “Infowars said Judicial Watch is calling for a criminal investigation into funding for the campaign after its Chris Farrell suggested George Soros was linked to the move, including grant money given to his groups afer pushing leftist agendas.”
WND columnist Mychal Massie wrote on Oct. 29 that “it’s Soros’ Open Society Foundations that are the primary threat to our way of life,” ranting: “Bankrolling violent subversive groups for the express purpose of subverting the government of the United States of America and deconstructing our Constitution for purposes of bringing about insurrection is by definition sedition. This is exactly what George Soros has been knowingly funding since at least 1984.” Massie added that “An example is the so-called ‘caravan of refugees,’ which is an act of organized politico-subversion intended to create a Marxist climate of anti-American resentment from within the borders of America.” Massie concluded his screed: “We are a country of laws, and it’s past time to investigate and punish the person behind this intended seditious subversion of our culture. ‘Someone’s got to go to jail’ for this, and that someone is George Soros. At the very least he should be deported back to Hungary where it is my understanding that their government would love to see him again.”
Except that’s not true at all. A New York Times fact-check found no evidence that Soros or Pueblos Sin Fronteras were involved in the current caravan (though Pueblos Sin Fronteras has been involved in organizing earlier journeys). USA Today has documented how the Soros lie spread through right-wing social media.
This is not the first time WND has pushed such a Soros conspiracy theory. An April 29 article, headlined “Border Caravan? Call it the George Soros Express” — promoted on WND’s front page with the more benign headline “Who’s paying for caravan to U.S. border?” — blamed “billionaire George Soros” in part for purportedly funding a “well-organized caravan-style invasion” earlier this year, touting a state Republican official calling Soros a “leftist puppet master” — a term that is considered to be longtime anti-Semitic language. But that didn’t appear to be true either.
Embracing false conspiracy theories about George Soros is probably not the way to profitability for WND if it’s genuinely interested in not going out of business.