Right-wing media outlets, including Fox News and Newsmax, continue to double down on President Donald Trump's claim that the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool — which is suffering from algae and a peeling, cracked liner — was the target of vandalism. And Salon's Sophia Tesfaye views that claim as a glaring example of MAGA media pushing unsubstantiated conspiracy theories in order to mask Trump's "failures."
"The bizarre ordeal with the renovation of Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool is important not because of the pool itself," Tesfaye argues in Salon. "Americans have bigger concerns than algae in Washington. It matters because it illustrates a broader pattern that has defined Trump's political career and increasingly characterizes his administration's communication strategy. More than merely mismanaging reality, the White House is actively replacing it with conspiracy. The project has collapsed into an emblem of systemic incompetence and cronyism that the administration has attempted to mask through a dizzying array of official conspiracy theories, weaponized law enforcement and cynical trolling."
That "trolling," according to Tesfaye, includes well-known right-wing media figures like Fox News' Laura Ingraham and Newsmax's Grant Stinchfield.
In a June 22 post on X, formerly Twitter, Ingraham wrote, "Will any Democrat urge people not to vandalize the Reflecting Pool?"
Stinchfield, meanwhile, posted a video of himself near the Reflecting Pool and tweeted, "President Trump fixes the reflecting pool and a week later it’s green again, loaded with algae… Sabotage… Vandalism? I believe it is. The left can't stand Trump, American greatness and his quest to make DC beautiful again. What a shame!"
Similarly, Tesfaye observes, "War Room" host Steve Bannon is claiming that "the reason" that Trump loyalist Bill Pulte is serving as acting national intelligence director "is to get to the bottom of the 2020 stolen election."
"Right-wing media has long functioned as both amplifier and validator for Trump's claims," Tesfaye observes, "but the Reflecting Pool episode shows how far that relationship has evolved. It is no longer reactive. It is now anticipatory. The ecosystem does not wait for evidence; it constructs a narrative framework into which evidence, if it ever appears, can be slotted later. In the meantime, repetition does the work. A claim aired on cable becomes a segment, becomes a tweet, becomes a talking point — becomes, for millions of viewers, a form of truth."
The Salon journalist continues, "And yet, even that is only part of the picture. Because alongside these attempts to rewrite a mundane failure, the White House has started doing something more deliberate and more dangerous: openly courting conspiracy culture itself…. The algae in the Reflecting Pool, the fake Q drop and the phantom menace of election fraud are, in many ways, the same story. When the administration confronts an inconvenient reality, it substitutes evidence with insinuation. Then right-wing media personalities rush to amplify claims before facts are established. The purpose is to transform accountability into victimhood and failure into sabotage."


