QAnon supporters and right-wing figures used the conservative video-sharing platform Rumble to host Election Day livestreams and other midterms coverage, earning millions of views on content that pushed election-related conspiracy theories and misinformation. Many of these Rumble videos were shared across Facebook, even as some seem to violate the platform's policies.
Launched in 2013, Rumble has cast itself as a conservative alternative to YouTube, the Google-owned video sharing platform, and it has since gained the financial backing of prominent conservatives, including billionaire Peter Thiel, Ohio Sen.-elect J.D. Vance, and Fox News host Dan Bongino. The platform, which has been described by founder Chris Pavlovski as “immune from cancel culture,” has become a home for users who have been convinced by right-wing politicians and media personalities that they are being unfairly targeted and censored on Facebook, even though such claims have been repeatedly debunked.
Following the January 6 insurrection, many right-wing figures who pushed former President Donald Trump’s election lies saw their content or accounts demonetized or removed from YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook for violating their policies.
This election cycle, right-wing figures utilized Rumble to spread conspiracy theories and misinformation about the electoral process in the lead-up to the vote, during Election Day livestreams, and in post-election coverage. The company claims to have had “a record day for users and consumption” on Election Day.