The Borneo Post

Nazis, racists, bigots: Extremism on US ballot in 2018

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WASHINGTON: Arthur Jones is an avowed Nazi. John Fitzgerald says the Holocaust is a myth. Rick Tyler wants to ‘ make America white again.’ Their fringe ideas are reminiscen­t of another age, but the unapologet­ic men who espouse them are all on US election ballots in 2018.

Extremism and bigotry, even outright white supremacy and anti- Semitism, have found new lives in 21st century US politics and the era of President Donald Trump, beyond just the toxic rhetoric of a few little- known cranks.

They have received more exposure this year on the national stage than at any time in recent memory. And the mainly conservati­ve proponents of hate running for office are proving to be a major embarrassm­ent for the Republican Party.

In Illinois, Jones, who called the Holocaust ‘ the biggest, blackest lie in history’ and once ran a newspaper ad with a large swastika in the middle, is the Republican candidate for Congress, after he won the party primary by running unopposed in a largely Democratic district.

Russel Walker, running for a seat in North Carolina’s state house, proclaims ‘there is nothing wrong with being a racist’ and that Jews are ‘descendant­s of Satan.’

In Wisconsin, Paul Nehlen, the leading Republican running to fi ll the seat in Congress currently held by retiring Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, has emerged as a leader of the alt-right movement, someone who critics warn wants to provide white nationalis­ts and anti- Semites a stronger foothold in US culture and politics. — AFP

 ??  ?? A man clears his damaged house in the village of Neos Voutzas, near Athens. — AFP photo
A man clears his damaged house in the village of Neos Voutzas, near Athens. — AFP photo

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