On September 12, 2003, during the
provincial election campaign in
Ontario,
Canada, the
Ernie Eves campaign issued a news release that called opponent
Dalton McGuinty an "
evil reptilian kitten-eater from another planet". The words appeared at the end of the news release. Eves said the epithet was meant as a joke, and acknowledged the words were "over the top", but refused to apologize. Lucas Davenport, who later claimed to have written the gag ballot, said, "I don't know if you've heard the conspiracy theory about the Lizard Men; a friend of mine, we didn't like the candidates, so we were at first going to write in 'revolution', because we thought that was good and to the point. And then, we thought 'the Lizard People' would be even funnier." Franken won the election after recount. In February 2011, on the
Opie and Anthony radio show, the comedian
Louis C.K. jokingly asked former
U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld a number of times if he and
Dick Cheney were lizard people who enjoyed the taste of human flesh. Amused by Rumsfeld's refusal to directly answer the question, C.K. suggested it was a possible admission of guilt. He went on to further muse that perhaps those who are lizard people cannot lie about it; when asked if they are lizards, they either have to avoid answering the question or say yes. On March 4, 2013, a video depicting a security agent with unusual features guarding a speech by U.S. President
Barack Obama was spotlighted in a
Wired report about shapeshifting reptilian humanoids. This led to a tongue-in-cheek response from chief
National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden who said "any alleged program to guard the president with aliens or robots would likely have to be scaled back or eliminated in
the sequester". In October 2022,
Dutch MP
Thierry Baudet, head of the far-right
Forum for Democracy, said in an interview with the "Geopolitics and Empire" podcast that he believes that the world is "being governed by evil reptiles". Some adherents of the
QAnon conspiracy theory have also borrowed from the reptilian conspiracy theory, including elements shared in
antisemitic conspiracy theories. ==See also==