The Capital

Proud Boys regroup on local level

Far-right militia has a growing presence at town meetings

- By Sheera Frenkel

They showed up last month outside the school board building in Beloit, Wisconsin, to protest school masking requiremen­ts.

They turned up days later at a school board meeting in New Hanover County, North Carolina, before a vote on a mask mandate.

They also attended a gathering in Downers Grove, Illinois, where parents were trying to remove a nonbinary author’s graphic novel from public school libraries.

Members of the Proud Boys, the far-right nationalis­t group, have increasing­ly appeared in recent months at town council gatherings, school board presentati­ons and health department question-and-answer sessions across the country. Their presence at the events is part of a strategy shift by the militia organizati­on toward a larger goal: to bring their brand of menacing politics to the local level.

For years, the group was known for its national profile. The Proud Boys were prominent at the rallies of Donald Trump, at one point offering to serve as the former president’s private militia. On Jan. 6, some Proud Boys members filmed themselves storming the U.S. Capitol to protest what they falsely said was an election that had been stolen from Trump.

But since federal authoritie­s have cracked down on the group for the Jan. 6 attack, including arresting more than a dozen of its members, the organizati­on has been more muted. Or at least that was how it appeared.

Away from the national spotlight, the Proud Boys instead quietly shifted attention to local chapters, some members and researcher­s said. In small communitie­s — usually suburbs or small towns with population­s of tens of thousands — its followers have tried to expand membership by taking on local causes. That way, they said, the group can amass more supporters in time to influence next year’s midterm elections.

“The plan of attack if you want to make change is to get involved at the local level,” said Jeremy Bertino, a prominent member of the Proud Boys from North Carolina.

The group had dissolved its national leadership after Jan. 6 and was being run exclusivel­y by its local chapters, Bertino said. It was deliberate­ly involving its members in local issues, he added.

That focus is reflected in the Proud Boys’ online activity. On the encrypted messaging app Telegram, the Proud Boys’ main group in the United States has barely budged in number — with about 31,000 followers — over the last year. But over a dozen new Telegram channels have emerged for local Proud Boys chapters in cities such as Seattle and Philadelph­ia over that same period, according to data collected by The New York Times. Those local Telegram groups have rapidly grown from dozens to hundreds of members.

Other far-right groups that were active during Trump’s presidency, such as the Oath Keepers and the Three Percenters, have followed the same pattern, researcher­s said. They have also expanded their local groups in states such as Pennsylvan­ia, Texas and Michigan and are less visible nationally.

“We’ve seen these groups adopt new tactics in the wake of Jan. 6, which have enabled them to regroup and reorganize themselves,” said Jared Holt, a resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research

Lab who researches domestic extremist groups. “One of the most successful tactics they’ve used is decentrali­zing.”

The Proud Boys were founded in 2016 by Gavin McInnes, a co-founder of Vice. Enrique Tarrio, an activist and Florida director of Latinos for Trump, later took over as leader. The group, which is exclusivel­y male, has espoused misogynist­ic, Islamophob­ic and anti-Semitic views, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which has designated it as a hate group.

By the 2020 election, the Proud Boys — who often wear distinctiv­e black-andyellow uniforms — had become the largest and most public of the far-right militias. Last year, Trump referred to them in a presidenti­al debate when he was asked about white nationalis­t groups, replying, “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by.”

After the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, the group grew disillusio­ned with Trump. The president distanced himself from the riot and declined to offer immunity to those who were involved. The Proud Boys have also experience­d a leadership vacuum, after Tarrio was arrested two days before the Capitol attack on charges of property destructio­n and illegally holding weapons.

That was when the Proud Boys began concentrat­ing on local issues, Holt said. But as local chapters flourished, he said, the group “increased their radical tendencies” because members felt more comfortabl­e taking extreme positions in smaller circles.

Many Proud Boys’ local chapters have now taken on causes tied to the coronaviru­s pandemic, with members showing up at protests over mask mandates and mandatory vaccinatio­n policies, according to researcher­s who study extremism.

This year, members of the

Proud Boys were recorded at 145 protests and demonstrat­ions, up from 137 events in 2020, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, a nonprofit that monitors violence.

But the data most likely understate the Proud Boys’ activities because it doesn’t include school board meetings and local health board meetings, said Shannon Hiller, the executive director of the Bridging Divides Initiative, a nonpartisa­n research group that tracks political violence.

On the Proud Boys’ local Telegram channels, members often share news articles and video reports about students who were

barred from schools for refusing to wear a mask or employees who were fired over a vaccine requiremen­t. Some make plans to appear at protests to act as “muscle,” with the goal of intimidati­ng the other side and attracting new members with a show of force, according to the Telegram conversati­ons viewed by The Times.

“Tell me where I need to be and I am there,” one member of a Proud Boys group in Wisconsin wrote last month about protests of mask mandates. “I can drive 5-6 hours in any direction.”

At some local meetings where the Proud Boys have shown up, they have spoken and threatened community leaders, according to news reports. At others, they have simply stood silently and watched.

Often, their presence has been enough to disrupt events. Last month, the school board in Beloit said it canceled classes because some of the Proud Boys were at a local protest over mask requiremen­ts.

In Orange County, California, the school board said in September that it would install metal detectors and hire extra security after several Proud Boys attended a meeting and threatened its members.

 ?? STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY ?? Members of the Proud Boys march last month during a protest against vaccine mandates in New York.
STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY Members of the Proud Boys march last month during a protest against vaccine mandates in New York.

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