Reporter Looks At QAnon Theory And Georgia Politics Ahead Of Tuesday’s Election

Oliver Laughland, a reporter and the U.S. southern bureau chief for The Guardian News and Media, wanted to know what voters thought about QAnon — specifically Georgia voters.

Oliver Laughland

The so-called “QAnon Theory” has made a showing in Georgia politics ahead of Tuesday’s general election.

Republican U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler, who is running to keep her appointed seat, defended an endorsement received from Georgia congressional candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Greene openly embraces QAnon conspiracy theories.



Republican Angela Stanton-King, who’s running for a Georgia U.S. House seat, refused to address tweets from her Twitter account that seemed to side with those theories as well.

Oliver Laughland, a reporter and the U.S. southern bureau chief for The Guardian News and Media, wanted to know what voters thought about QAnon — specifically Georgia voters.

He shared some of what he found with Lisa Rayam, host of WABE’s “Morning Edition.”