Breaking: Congressman Dave Brat’s Campaign Promotes Conspiracy Theorist Tweets On Parkland Shooting

by | Mar 1, 2018 | COMMUNITY

 This is a developing story. 

As local students in his district prepare for a national walkout in support of gun control, a Twitter account belonging to Congressman Dave Brat’s (R) campaign was liking tweets from conspiracy theorist websites implying Parkland survivor David Hogg is a paid “crisis actor.”

One of those tweets was from The Bradford Files, a site which primarily shares right-wing memes and conspiracy theories. The tweet was originally sent to CNN, asking the outlet to question the teenage Hogg if he is receiving money for speaking about the mass casualty shooting on Valentine’s Day.

A representative image from The Bradford Files site

The idea that the survivors of school shootings are paid to distort or invent stories is a common one in far-right circles, disseminated throughout social media by fake accounts associated with foreign spy agencies and through alternative media like Alex Jones’ Infowars.

A tweet mocking Hogg

One of the other tweets Brat’s account endorsed was by a Twitter user who goes by the screenname Educating Liberals (@Education4Liberals). The specific tweet was one making fun of Hogg. We emailed and called the Washington office of Brat to ask what his position was regarding students who speak out, and if he believes that any are paid “crisis actors” and were told a statement would be issued by early afternoon.

The Educating Liberals account had previously shared a tweet calling Hogg a “crisis actor”, and the user reported that YouTube had deleted videos he made criticizing the high school student. It’s a common theme throughout his tweets.

An earlier tweet on the topic

When RVA Mag called the Washington, D.C. office for comment, multiple individuals refused to use their last names or identify themselves, eventually being transferred to someone described as “Mark, our chief of staff” – who also refused to give his last name and said that all questions should be referred to Juliana Heerschap.

Outside of Heerschap, no one speaking would give their last name, not even simply for a log of who RVA Mag spoke to for future follow-up. A follow-up call with a front desk person confirmed that the chief of staff is Mark Kelly.

Via email and over the phone, Heerschap said a formal statement would be forthcoming “in 30 minutes or so,” that would answer all of our questions. Some of RVA Mag’s questions included Brat’s view of the role of young people, if he believes Hogg is a paid “crisis actor”, and if he stands by claims he made last year in a Richmond Times-Dispatch article that women who protested him were paid activists for the far left.

The formal statement avoided answering any of those questions and is printed in full below:

“It has come to our attention that a campaign staffer who helps with posting in the @DaveBratVA7th twitter account mistakenly liked tweets on this account when they believed they were logged into their personal account. This was against our policy of Dave approving twitter content. Dave did not approve the “liking” of these tweets nor would he approved of liking the question about Mr. Hogg. As has consistently been his position, neither Dave nor his staff, support any alt-right views or individuals. The staffer’s personal tweet likes have been removed, and the campaign is putting safeguards in place to ensure that it will not happen again.”

RVA Mag asked in a follow-up if the office can answer the other questions and if they’ll confirm who the staffer was, what their official job was, if they are being retained for the campaign, in addition to what the other 53 liked tweets were.

From 527 likes to 472

Sometime between our initial call and email, sent at 11:59, the campaign Twitter account had purged 55 likes, including the two RVA Mag inquired about.

This story will be updated as more information comes in.

David Streever

David Streever

David Streever was editor of the RVA Mag print quarterly from 2017 until 2018. He's written two cycling books for Falcon and covered the Tour de France and the 2015 UCI Championship in Richmond. He writes about politics, culture, cycling, and pretty much anything else.




more in community

Before Anyone Was Watching

I went to Virginia MOCA expecting to hear Andy Howell talk about skateboarding. Instead, I left thinking about community and how people find each other. Howell's installation opens Seamless, the museum's new exhibition exploring the overlap between art and design. At...

Duron Chavis is Building More Than a Farm

How two decades of community organizing grew into a vision for land ownership, education, and self-determination. The first time I met Duron Chavis, he wasn't talking about farmland. He was talking about culture. It was the early 2000s, and Happily Natural Day was...

RVA 5×5 | Leapfrogging Back to 1776, 50 Years at a Time: 1926

Editor's Note: We're sharing this essay from community content partner Jon Baliles of RVA 5x5. If you enjoy his work and want more in-depth coverage of Richmond politics and history, consider subscribing to RVA 5x5 on Substack. The views expressed are those of the...

The Light That Never Went Out 

There is a spotlight still mounted in the rafters of 528 N. 2nd Street. It has been there since 1914. It has outlasted segregation, fire, the highway that cut Jackson Ward in two, and decades of silence. On the nights when the Hippodrome Theater fills up, that light...

Virginia’s New Marijuana Law: Everything You Need to Know

After years of legislative battles, vetoes, compromise negotiations, and numerous articles, Virginia finally has a roadmap for legal recreational marijuana sales. The state budget signed into law earlier this week establishes a regulated cannabis marketplace beginning...

The Strange Afterlife of Virginia’s President Heads

Editor's Note: Reminder, the sculptures are located on private property and are not open for general visitation. Access is available only through scheduled guided tours, with Labor Day weekend currently expected to be the final tour on the calendar. Tour information...

Fourth of July 2026 in Richmond: Fireworks, Festivals, and More

The best Fourth of July celebration in Richmond probably isn't the one with the biggest fireworks. It's the one where someone forgot the hot dog buns, the cooler is running low on ice, kids are chasing each other through sprinklers, and somebody insists they know a...

Topics: