The Jerusalem Post

Former Ku Klux Klan leader Duke runs for US Senate in Louisiana

- • By BRYN STOLE

BATON ROUGE (Reuters) – David Duke, a former leader of the white supremacis­t Ku Klux Klan, launched his candidacy on Friday for the US Senate from Louisiana, saying white people are threatened in America and that he hears echoes of his views in Donald Trump’s rhetoric.

Duke, a Republican, is a former Louisiana state legislator and unsuccessf­ul candidate for governor who served a 15-month federal prison sentence after pleading guilty in 2002 to felony charges of tax evasion and mail fraud.

Trump, the Republican presidenti­al nominee, drew criticism in February for failing to quickly disavow support from Duke.

At a news conference in Baton Rouge after filing as a candidate to succeed outgoing Republican Senator David Vitter, Duke, 66, said he watched Trump’s speech accepting the Republican presidenti­al nomination on Thursday in Cleveland and heard echoes of his own past political platforms.

“I don’t really care what Donald Trump says about me. I respect what he’s doing,” Duke said.

In an online video announcing his candidacy, Duke also said, “I’m overjoyed to see Donald Trump and most Americans embrace most of the issues that I’ve championed for years.”

In his video, Duke said he believes in equal rights and respect for all Americans but “what makes me different is I also demand respect for the rights and heritage of European-Americans.”

Duke’s announceme­nt came as Louisiana’s capital grapples with racial tensions after the fatal July 5 shooting by police of a black man named Alton Sterling and the July 17 shooting deaths of three police officers by a black US Marine Corps veteran.

In his comments to reporters, Duke called the Black Lives Matter protest movement that arose after a series of killings of black men by police in various US cities a “terrorist group.”

Duke said that “European-Americans” need a politician to fight for their interests and that white people are threatened in the United States. Duke, the former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, said he was no longer affiliated with the group.

Duke’s announceme­nt drew and swift and scathing condemnati­on from Republican leaders and others. The Republican Party of Louisiana called Duke a “felon and hate-filled fraud” who does not embody Republican values.

Ward Baker, executive director of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which supports Republican candidates in Senate races, said Duke will never get the organizati­on’s backing.

“I strongly denounce the racism, bigotry and anti-Semitism of David Duke. His views are a relic of ancient history and are repugnant to Louisiania­ns,” Boustany said.

In February, Trump initially blamed his failure to reject Duke’s support on not having heard an interviewe­r clearly.

“I disavowed David Duke all weekend long, on Facebook, on Twitter, and obviously, it is never enough,” Trump told NBC’s Today show after being widely criticized.

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(Reuters) DAVID DUKE

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