A senior adviser for Pete Buttigieg was accused of running a fake Nigerian supporter account, but th

August 2024 · 4 minute read
2020-02-16T20:50:00Z

A senior adviser for the Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg got caught up in the Twitter rumor mill on Sunday when she was accused of running a fake account purporting to be a Nigerian supporter of the former mayor, but the person who Insider confirmed owned the account said it was a misunderstanding.

The theory that Lis Smith, the senior communications adviser for Buttigieg's campaign, was behind an account for someone named "Chinedu," who was described in the profile's bio as a "Pete Buttigieg supporter from Nigeria" who loves "wine and dancing," was surfaced in a series of screenshots that included a tweet from the account seemingly identifying the owner as Smith.

In the one tweet presented as evidence that Smith slipped while running the account, the author wrote on January 30: "Team Pete. Hey. It's Lis. It's Phase 4. Time to leave it all on the floor. Phone bankers, we need you."

—Taryn Jay 🌹 (@FeralHogs420) February 16, 2020

The language in the tweet appears to match up with some lines from an email sent to supporters from the Buttigieg campaign, which announced "Phase 4," or "time to leave it all on the field."

After the theory began making the rounds, the "Chinedu" account tweeted to mock the allegations, blaming "Bernie Bros." The account appeared to have been deleted by Sunday afternoon.

Insider identified Instagram and LinkedIn accounts with associated usernames and similar profiles to the @easychinedu account, and when reached for comment via LinkedIn message, the person behind the accounts said they were not affiliated with Buttigieg's campaign and that the person had run the Twitter account before deleting it Sunday for fear of being doxxed.

The man, who said he was Nigerian and a supporter of the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, also told Insider he had posted the "It's Lis" tweet as a joking reference to the campaign email, which he saw circulating on Twitter.

Insider confirmed the existence and identity of the man behind the accounts through requesting and receiving a photograph of the man holding a sign with the date and phrase "I am not Lis Smith" written on it. He also verified his ownership of the account through email screenshots.

Insider is not revealing his identity to protect his privacy.

By Sunday evening, the Jewish Currents editor David Klion apologized on Twitter for his role helping spread the notion that Smith was behind the account.

—DavidKlion (@DavidKlion) February 16, 2020

Smith acknowledged the allegations on her official account, brushing it off as an "absurd" conspiracy theory.

—Lis Smith (@Lis_Smith) February 16, 2020

Matt Corridoni, the campaign's deputy rapid-response communications director, emailed a statement to Insider denying that Smith created the account.

"Nigerian shadow account conspiracy theories are the new rat emojis," Corridoni wrote. "Sad but not surprising."

Asked whether the campaign was officially denying that Smith had created and posted from the account, Corridoni confirmed it was regarded as "an online conspiracy theory."

"Of course we are because this is very obviously an online conspiracy theory," Corridoni wrote in an email. "Quite shocked you'd think otherwise."

Other journalists chimed in to joke about the theory, with New York magazine's Olivia Nuzzi alluding to email scams, writing that Smith "asked me for my social security number and the name of the street I grew up on...or else I couldn't have a press credential to cover Pete."

—Olivia Nuzzi (@Olivianuzzi) February 16, 2020

Smith is a well-known political adviser who partially made her name as a campaign aide for Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York and has been credited for the media strategy responsible for Buttigieg's rise in the polls, which she has described as "going out everywhere, meeting voters where they are, not turning our noses up at nontraditional outlets."

The account's identity as a black Buttigieg supporter touches on one of the campaign's widely reported points of vulnerability, as an Insider poll last fall found the former mayor was satisfactory to only 27% of black voters.

Those results came a month after a report from The Intercept said the campaign had falsely said three prominent black figures in South Carolina supported his Douglass Plan policy proposals when only two had and none had supported him as a candidate.

Update: This post has been updated to include statements from the man found to have run the Twitter account.

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