Los Angeles Times

The president and the far- right movement

Trump’s call for Proud Boys to ‘ stand by’ refocuses attention on his relationsh­ip with extremists

- By Matt Pearce

President Trump once again emboldened the violent far right last week when he def lected a debate moderator’s request to tell those groups to stand down, instead responding that one such organizati­on, the Proud Boys, should “stand back and stand by,” adding, “Somebody has got to do something about antifa and the left.”

Here’s what you need to know about the far- right movement in the U. S. and why the president’s remarks were significan­t.

What does “far right’” mean?

There is no single definition of what it means to be “far right,” which is a broad term applied to a fragmented series of groups and ideologies that have operated along the fringes of U. S. politics, some for more than a century. Such groups embrace ideals of white racial purity, ultranatio­nalism, “Western civilizati­on” or male dominance. They have often expressed hostility to Black people, immigrants, members of certain religious groups ( typically Jews, Muslims and Catholics), left- wing organizati­ons, feminists, the federal government and even liberal democracy.

Far- right groups are also often labeled as racists, white supremacis­ts, white nationalis­ts, fascists, “altright,” neo- Nazis, neo-Confederat­es, chauvinist­s and militias, with the distinctio­n frequently depending on their history or ideology. Historical­ly, America’s best- known right- wing extremist organizati­on is the Ku Klux Klan, which was violently dedicated to preserving white power after the Confederac­y’s defeat in the Civil War brought new rights to formerly enslaved Black Americans.

The Klan’s power has waned, but such groups continue to appear in the public sphere. Many Americans will be most familiar with their gathering at the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., where far- right groups clashed with anti- racist protesters, killing one woman.

Who are the Proud Boys?

The Anti- Defamation League, which monitors extremists, describes the Proud Boys as “violent, nationalis­tic, Islamophob­ic, transphobi­c and misogynist­ic,” but says “its members represent a range of ethnic background­s, and its leaders vehemently protest any allegation­s of racism.”

Its membership is estimated to be in the hundreds, organized into local chapters that have attended public rallies and protests and sometimes violently confronted left- wing protesters. Its founder, Gavin McInnes, describes the group as a “pro- Western fraternity,” but the AntiDefama­tion League says it has “many of the hallmarks of a gang, and its members have taken part in multiple acts of brutal violence and intimidati­on.”

On Wednesday, media outlets in Portland, Ore., reported that one Proud Boy member had been arrested on suspicion of assault and pointing a gun at anti- fascist protesters at an Aug. 22 confrontat­ion.

What is Trump’s relationsh­ip to the far right?

Trump’s groundbrea­king 2016 presidenti­al campaign energized far- right groups as he made harsh attacks on immigrants, Muslims, liberals and the idea of America as a collaborat­ive participan­t in internatio­nal diplomacy and trade. He embraced what are sometimes called “white grievance” politics, attracting large numbers of white voters, most frequently men, who believed that they had been the victims of racial discrimina­tion.

After winning, Trump populated his White House with hard- line conservati­ves such as Stephen K. Bannon, whose website Breitbart had been a key platform for elevating the so- called alt- right, which turned out to just be another name for fascism.

This drew praise from the far right, which felt that in Trump it now had a vehicle to inject its own extremist politics into the mainstream after decades of marginaliz­ation, humiliatio­n and defeat.

As The Times reported in 2016, David Duke, a former Klan grand wizard, declared that “the fact that Donald Trump’s doing so

well, it proves that I’m winning.”

Richard Spencer, president of the National Policy Institute, who called for a separate white nation, said, “Before Trump, our identity ideas, national ideas, they had no place to go.”

Andrew Anglin, operator of the neo- Nazi website the Daily Stormer, said, “Virtually every alt- right Nazi I know is volunteeri­ng for the Trump campaign.”

How has Trump talked about the far right in the past?

It’s typical for politician­s to publicly distance themselves from their most extreme supporters, usually to avoid alienating moderates or energizing opponents. But Trump, who has sometimes retweeted Twitter accounts associated with white nationalis­ts, has often stumbled, prevaricat­ed, pleaded ignorance or shifted blame to the left when confronted about his support from the far right.

In 2016, after retweeting a quote by Benito Mussolini, the Italian fascist leader who was allied with Adolf Hitler, Trump said, “Look, Mussolini was Mussolini ...

and I know who said it,” calling it “a very good quote, an interestin­g quote.”

Asked to disavow Duke and the KKK, Trump evaded, saying, “I don’t know anything about David Duke. I don’t know anything about what you’re even talking about with white supremacy or white supremacis­ts. So, I don’t know.”

After the deadly 2017 Charlottes­ville rally, Trump told reporters : “I’ve condemned neo- Nazis; I’ve condemned many different groups,” but said he believed that not all of the right- wing participan­ts were neo- Nazis, and that “you also had people that were very fine people on both sides.”

That comment caused an uproar among the president’s critics, who took the remark as Trump calling neo- Nazis “very fine people” and who denounced his unwillingn­ess to take a hard stand against racists while the nation was rattled by its largest fascist gathering in years.

On Thursday, two days after the debate and the Proud Boys' celebratio­n that followed, Trump denounced the group in an interview on Fox News. “I’ve said it many times, and let me be clear again: I condemn the KKK,” the president said. “I condemn all white supremacis­ts. I condemn the Proud Boys. I don’t know much about the Proud Boys, almost nothing. But I condemn that.”

What Trump said at the debate

Moderator Chris Wallace asked Trump if he would denounce far- right radicals.

“Are you willing tonight to condemn white supremacis­ts and militia groups and to say that they need to stand down and not add to the violence in a number of these cities?” Wallace asked.

“Sure, I’m willing to do that. I would say, I would say, almost everything I see is from the left wing, not from the right wing,” Trump said. “I’m willing to do anything. I want to see peace.”

“Then do it, sir,” Wallace said.

“Say it. Do it. Say it,” Democratic nominee Joe Biden said.

“You want to call ’ em — what do you want to call ’ em? Give me a name, give me a name,” Trump said. “Who would you like me to condemn?”

Wallace and Biden, talking over each other, suggested “white supremacis­ts” and the right- wing group the Proud Boys.

“Proud Boys, stand back and stand by — but I’ll tell you what, I’ll tell you what, somebody’s got to do something about antifa and the left,” Trump said.

Many listeners, including members of the Proud Boys, saw the president’s response as a sign of support, the opposite of a denunciati­on.

Facing widespread criticism afterward, Trump attempted Wednesday to walk back his remark, saying, “I don’t know who Proud Boys are, but whoever they are, they have to stand down, let enforcemen­t do their work.” But he reiterated, “Now, antifa is a real problem, because the problem is on the left.”

Pressed again by a reporter to denounce white supremacis­ts, Trump responded, “I’ve always denounced any form of any of that.”

 ?? John Locher Associated Press ?? MEMBERS of the white supremacis­t group the Proud Boys, including leader Enrique Tarrio, second from left, gesture and cheer onstage as they and other far- right demonstrat­ors hold a rally last month in Portland, Ore.
John Locher Associated Press MEMBERS of the white supremacis­t group the Proud Boys, including leader Enrique Tarrio, second from left, gesture and cheer onstage as they and other far- right demonstrat­ors hold a rally last month in Portland, Ore.

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