Nearly 40% of Americans and most Republicans believe the lie linking migrants to fentanyl smuggling, an NPR/Ipsos finds. When respondents were asked about the false claim that “most of the fentanyl entering the U.S. is smuggled in by unauthorized migrants crossing the border illegally,” 39% of respondents said it was true.
That includes 23% of Democrats, 38% of independents, and a whopping 60% of Republicans. More than half of respondents also said there’s an “invasion” at the southern border, which is yet another lie. What both of these lies have in common is that they’ve been pushed relentlessly by lying Republicans and propaganda outlets.
As noted just last week, Tennessee’s Marsha Blackburn is among the most recent elected Republicans to spread this trope, almost lamenting a more than 200% rise in fentanyl seizures by U.S. border officials. The lie has also come from Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, as well as Steve Scalise and conspiracy theory proponent Elise Stefanik.
During a July press conference, Scalise claimed that a so-called border crisis is “so bad that it’s created a fentanyl crisis that is killing tens of thousands of people.” What he didn’t answer is how massive drug seizures by U.S. border officials have equaled an “open border.” That fact is, it’s largely U.S. citizens who have been caught smuggling large quantities of drugs, and it’s happening at ports of entry, not in between.
But Republicans don’t care, and would rather turn this genuine crisis of drug overdoses into anti-immigrant fodder. They’re doing it with success, with the polling showing that a good chunk of respondents believe it’s “at least somewhat true that migrants bringing fentanyl and other illegal drugs over the southern border are responsible for the increase in drug overdoses and deaths in the U.S.”
When it comes to the “invasion” lie, “Republicans (76%) believe this more so than Democrats (40%) and independents (46%),” the polling said. “However, Republicans who cite Fox News or other conservative news sources as their main news source are even more likely to believe this than Republicans who get their news elsewhere (91% vs. 71% of those who have a different primary news source).”