The Guardian (USA)

White nationalis­t hate groups have grown 55% in Trump era, report finds

- Jason Wilson

White nationalis­t hate groups in the US have increased 55% throughout the Trump era, according to a new report by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), and a “surging” racist movement continues to be driven by “a deep fear of demographi­c change”.

Nationally, there were 155 such groups counted last year, and they were present in most states. These groups were counted separately from Ku Klux Klan groups, racist skinheads, Christian Identity groups, and neo-Confederat­e groups, all of which also express some version of white supremacis­t beliefs.

Since the turn of the millennium, the report says, “American racists have fretted over what they fear will be the loss of their place of dominance in society” as its racial compositio­n changes.

The report notes that the perpetrato­r of a massacre on 3 August 2019 in El Paso, Texas, where 26 were killed, and another man who attacked a synagogue in Poway, California, killing one woman and wounding three more, claimed to be motivated by the idea that white people were being replaced.

The increase in hate groups includes many which openly advocate violence, terrorism and murder, and “accelerati­onist” groups ”who believe mass violence is necessary to bring about the collapse of our pluralisti­c society”, including organizati­ons like the Base, Atomwaffen Division, and Feuerkrieg Division, according to the report.

Seven members of the Base, six members of Atomwaffen Division, and one man, Richard Tobin, who is allegedly a member of both groups, have been arrested since last October on charges including firearms offenses, conspiring to vandalize synagogues and conspiracy to murder.

In January, the Guardian showed the inner workings of the Base, including the lead-up to the synagogue vandalism allegedly coordinate­d by

Tobin, and also revealed that the group’s founder was a Russia-based former security contractor, Rinaldo Nazzaro.

According to the SPLC report, the arrests are evidence that federal agencies are finally “hearing the alarm bells” regarding violent white nationalis­m.

It points out that in the last year, “the FBI upgraded its assessment of the threat posed by racially motivated extremists to a ‘national threat priority’”, and the “Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced a strategic shift toward countering racial hatred”.

But the report says that those efforts are hampered by senior members of the Donald Trump administra­tion like Trump aide Stephen Miller, “who has long been allied with anti-immi

grant hate groups”.

Miller’s attempts to insert white nationalis­t talking points into rightwing news website Breitbart’s coverage of the 2016 election were exposed last year, but the administra­tion has retained him in his senior role.

While the report concludes the overall number of hate groups dipped 8% on 2018’s record numbers, it says that this “does not reflect a significan­t diminishme­nt of the radical right”, and that other kinds of hate groups continue to grow in number.

Along with the increase in white nationalis­t groups, there was an increase in homophobic and transphobi­c organizati­ons, with anti-LGBTQ groups increasing 43% in 2019. Many of those highlighte­d in the SPLC report are religious fundamenta­lists.

The report calls for a “national movement against hate violence in America” in defense of “inclusive democracy”.

 ??  ?? Mourners visit the makeshift memorial near the Walmart in El Paso, Texas, where 22 people were killed in a mass shooting. Photograph: Cedar Attanasio/AP
Mourners visit the makeshift memorial near the Walmart in El Paso, Texas, where 22 people were killed in a mass shooting. Photograph: Cedar Attanasio/AP

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