Hartford Courant

Proud Boys no longer standing by

Once loyal far-right group mocks Trump ‘as a total failure’

- By Sheera Frenkel

After the presidenti­al election last year, the Proud Boys, a far-right group, declared its undying loyalty to President Donald Trump.

In a Nov. 8 post in a private channel of the messaging a pp Telegram, the group urged its followers to attend protests against anelection that it said had been fraudulent­ly stolen from Trump. “Hail Emperor Trump,” the Proud Boys wrote.

But by this week, the group’s attitude toward Trump had changed.

“Trump will go down as a total failure,” the Proud Boys said in the same Telegram channel Monday.

After Trump departed the White House on Wednesday, the Proud Boys, once among his staunchest supporters, have also started leaving his side. In dozens of conversati­ons on social media sites like Gab and Telegram, members of the group have begun calling Trump a “shill” and “extraordin­arily weak,” according to messages reviewed by The New York Times. They have also urged supporters to stop attending rallies and protests held for Trump or the Republican Party.

The comments are a startling turn for the Proud Boys, which for years backed Trump and promoted political violence.

Led by Henry “Enrique” Tarrio, many of its thousands of members were such die-hard fans of Trump that they offered to serve as his private militia and celebrated after he told them in a presidenti­al debate last year to “stand back and stand by.” On Jan. 6, some Proud Boys stormed the U.S. Capitol.

But since then, discontent with Trump, who later

condemned thev iolence, has boiled over. On social media, Proud Boys participan­ts have complained about his willingnes­s to leave office and said his disavowal of the Capitol rampage was an act of betrayal. And Trump, cut off on Facebook and Twitter, has been unable to talk directly to them to soothe their concerns or issue new rallying cries.

“When Trump told them that if he left office, America would fall into an abyss, they believed him,” Arieh Kovler, a political consultant and independen­t researcher in Israel who studies the far right, said of the Proud Boys. “Nowthat he has left office, they believe he has both surrendere­d and failed to do his patriotic duty.”

The shift raises questions about the strength of the support for Trump and suggests that pockets of his fan base are starting to fracture. Many of Trump’s fans still falsely believe he was deprived of office, but other far-right groups such as the Oath Keepers, America First and the Three Percenters have also started criticizin­g him in private Telegram channels, according to a review of messages.

Tarrio could not be reached for comment. A spokespers­on for Trump did not respond to a request for comment.

The Proud Boys were founded in 2016 by Gavin McInnes, who also was a founder of the online publicatio­n Vice, as aclub for men. It soon attracted people who appeared eager to engage in violence and who frequently espoused anti-Muslim and anti-Semitic views. The group had supported Trump since he assumed office.

The change in that support happened slowly. After November’s election, the group’s private Telegram channels, Gab pages and posts on the alternativ­e social networking site Parler were filled with calls to keep the faith with Trump. Many ProudBoys, echoing Trump’s falsehoods, said the election had been rigged, according to a review of messages.

The Proud Boys urged their members to attend “Stop the Steal” rallies.

One Nov. 23 message on a Proud Boys Telegram page read, “No Trump, no peace.” The message linked to informatio­n about a rally in front of the home of Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp.

As Trump’s legal team battled the election result with lawsuits, the ProudBoys followed the court cases and appeals in different states, posting frequent links in their Telegram channels to news reports.

But when Trump’s legal efforts failed, the Proud Boys called for him on social media to use his presidenti­al powers to stay in office. Some urged him to declare martial law or take control by force. In the last two weeks of December, they pushed Trump in their protests and on social media to “Cross the Rubicon.”

“They wanted to arm themselves and start a second civil war and take down the government on Trump’s behalf,” said Marc-Andre Argentino, a researcher who studies the far right and a doctoral candidate at Concordia University in Montreal. “But ultimately, he couldn’t be the authoritar­ian they wanted him to be.”

Then came the week of the Capitol storming.

On Jan. 4, Tarrio was arrested by the Metropolit­an Police on suspicion of burning a Black Lives Matter banner torn from a Black church in Washington.

Two days later, other Proud Boys members were part of the mob that breached the Capitol. Some posted dozens of videos of the rioters on social media, celebratin­g them as a show of “collective strength.”

The group expected Trump to champion the mob, according to their social media messages. Instead, Trump released a video Jan. 8 denouncing the violence.

The disappoint­ment was immediatel­y palpable. One Proud Boys Telegram channel posted: “It really is important for us all to see how much Trump betrayed his supporters this week. We are nationalis­ts 1st and always. Trump was just a man and as it turns out an extraordin­arily weak one at the end.”

Sincethen, at least fivemen who identified as members of the Proud Boys have been arrested in connection to the Capitol riots.

Some Proud Boys became furious that Trump did not appear interested in issuing presidenti­al pardons for their members who were arrested. In a Telegram post Jan. 15, they accused Trump of “instigatin­g” the events at the Capitol, adding that he then “washed his hands of it .”

“They thought they had his support and that, ultimately, Trump would come through for them, including with a pardon if they should need it,” said Jared Holt, a visiting research fellow at the Atlantic Council’s DFR Lab. “Now they realize they went too far in the riots.”

Some Proud Boys now say in posts that the group should “go dark” and retreat from political life by cutting its affiliatio­n to any political party. They are encouragin­g one another to focus on secessioni­st movements and local protests.

“To all demoralize­d Trump supporters: There is hope,” read one message in a Proud Boys Telegram channel Wednesday. “There is an alternativ­e. Abandon the GOP and the Dems.”

 ?? VICTORJ. BLUE/THE NEWYORKTIM­ES ?? Henry“Enrique”Tarrio is leader of the Proud Boys, an organizati­on known to promote and engage in political violence. Once staunch supporters of Donald Trump, the group is disenchant­ed with the ex-president.
VICTORJ. BLUE/THE NEWYORKTIM­ES Henry“Enrique”Tarrio is leader of the Proud Boys, an organizati­on known to promote and engage in political violence. Once staunch supporters of Donald Trump, the group is disenchant­ed with the ex-president.

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