Facebook posts
Facebook posts
stated on August 8, 2022 in a Facebook post:

Reuters reported that “White House employee Andrew Bates did use Nazi symbolism in a recent tweet.”

False
By Madison Czopek
August 16, 2022

Reuters didn’t report that a White House staffer used a Nazi symbol in a tweet

If your time is short

  • Reuters Fact Check did not report that a White House staffer used a Nazi symbol in a tweet. Images purporting to show a screenshot of such an article are fake.

  • Biden administration officials have shared versions of the pro-Biden "Dark Brandon" meme, including one that some Twitter users claimed featured a Nazi symbol.

  • That meme’s original creator said the design was based on a movie poster and featured an eagle, America’s national bird, not a Nazi symbol.

See the sources for this fact-check

Brandon just won’t go away.

The name gained political cachet in October 2021, when an NBC Sports reporter mistook a crowd’s profane chants about President Joe Biden for chants of support for NASCAR driver Brandon Brown. “Let’s go, Brandon!” became an anti-Biden mantra used by social media users and politicians alike

Brandon re-entered controversy in an Aug. 8 Facebook post, which featured a screenshot of what appeared to be a Reuters headline claiming that a Biden administration official had included a Nazi symbol in a tweet. 

The post read: 

“Fact check – White House employee Andrew Bates did use Nazi Symbolism in a recent tweet”.

In other versions of the image, also shared on Facebook and Twitter, the headline continued: “But he did so in a way that exhibits how extreme the opponents of Biden have become.” 

The posts were flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

Fake Reuters headline about dark Brandon Nazi symbol graphic
Figure 1: Screenshot from Facebook.

(Screenshot from Facebook.)

The Biden administration has recently embraced a “Let’s go, Brandon!” parody meme called “Dark Brandon,” which features edited images of Biden grinning with red laser eyes. These memes are a response to Dark MAGA, a far-right aesthetic promoting an authoritarian version of former President Donald Trump in dystopian images. 

The flagged post refers to a Dark Brandon meme.

Biden’s deputy press secretary, Andrew Bates, has mentioned and shared Dark Brandon memes in recent days.

One of the memes Bates shared on Aug. 7 was reminiscent of a movie poster for the 2012 Batman movie “The Dark Knight Rises”:

After the meme was shared, some Twitter users questioned whether the emblem in the background was a Nazi symbol.

Tobin Stone, the artist who first shared the Biden meme, confirmed to The Daily Dot that the meme was based on the Batman movie poster, which features a bat in the background. When making the Biden meme, Stone substituted an eagle for the bat. 

“The eagle is not, and was never intended to be the Reichsadler — it was just intended to be a representation of America’s national bird, the bald eagle, and any reasonable person would interpret it as such,” he told The Daily Dot.

A Reichsadler is an imperial eagle motif used by Nazi Germany.

In addition, the image in the Facebook post is not a screenshot of an actual Reuters Fact Check article. A search for the purported headline on the Reuters website turned up no matching results. Searches for the phrase “White House employee Andrew Bates did use Nazi symbolism” also returned no results.

Reuters confirmed in a statement that it did not publish a fact check about a tweet by White House employee Andrew Bates and the alleged use of Nazi symbolism. The news agency said the headline about the tweet that was attributed to Reuters Fact Check in social media posts was fabricated.

Our ruling

A fake screenshot claimed that Reuters Fact Check reported that “White House employee Andrew Bates did use Nazi symbolism in a recent tweet.”

Reuters Fact Check did not report this.

White House staffers have shared versions of the pro-Biden “Dark Brandon” meme, including one that some Twitter users claimed featured a Nazi symbol. The meme’s creator said the design was based on a movie poster and featured an eagle, America’s national bird, not a Nazi symbol.

We rate this claim False.

Our Sources

Facebook post, Aug. 8, 2022

Facebook post, Aug. 8, 2022

Tweet, Aug. 8, 2022

Tweet, Aug. 8, 2022

Tweet from White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates, Aug. 7, 2022 

Tweet from White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates, Aug. 12, 2022 

Tweet from White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates, Aug. 11, 2022 

Tweet from White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates, Aug. 7, 2022

Statement from Reuters, Aug. 16, 2022

Newsweek, "‘Dark Brandon’ Memes from White House Staffer Provoke Nazi, China Claims," Aug. 8, 2022

The Daily Dot, "Chinese propaganda or Nazi imagery? Dark Brandon memes face disputed origins," Aug. 8, 2022

Business Insider, "Biden White House embraces ‘Dark Brandon,’ a parody of the ‘Dark MAGA’ meme used by the far right," Aug. 8, 2022

The Washington Post, "Why ‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ is more than just a veiled insult," Jan. 13, 2022

The Washington Post, "Brandon returns, darkly: Democrats turn an insult into a pro-Biden meme," Aug. 8, 2022

Fox News, "White House tries again to rebrand Biden, this time as ‘dark Brandon,’" Aug. 8, 2022

Slate, "The week ‘dark Brandon’ died," Aug. 3, 2022

IMDb, "The Dark Knight Rises," accessed Aug. 11, 2022

Forbes Breaking News, "GOP lawmaker on House floor: ‘Let's Go Brandon!’" Oct. 25, 2021

CNN, "Congressman wears mask on House floor with not-so-secret message," accessed Aug. 11, 2022

Fox News, "How 'Let's Go Brandon!' became a national social media sensation," Oct. 9, 2021

Mediaite, "Biden White House goes all in on ‘Dark Brandon’ meme mocking pro-Trump ‘Dark MAGA’ movement," Aug. 8, 2022

Associated Press, "How ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ became code for insulting Joe Biden," Oct. 30, 2021

Mediaite, "Ben Collins warns journalists not to parrot term ‘Dark MAGA’: ‘Plenty of words for revanchist politics based on grievance and lies,’" May 20, 2022

Tweet from NBC News reporter Ben Collins, May 19, 2022

The Hill, "What is the ‘Dark Brandon’ meme that has taken the White House by storm?" Aug. 9, 2022

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