Chattanooga Times Free Press

William Regnery, who funded right-wing extremism, dies at 80

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BOCA GRANDE, Fla. — William H. Regnery II, the heir to a family publishing fortune who was known for his quiet but influentia­l support of extreme right-wing causes in the United States has died at 80.

He died at his home in Boca Grande, Florida, on July 2. A person who answered the phone at the Lemon Bay Funeral Home and Cremation Services in Englewood, Florida, on Saturday confirmed they handled Regnery’s arrangemen­ts, but would provide no additional informatio­n.

Cassie Miller, a senior research analyst for the Southern Poverty Law Center, said in an email Saturday that Regnery’s material contributi­ons helped to build networks of racist activists and a large body of pseudoscie­ntific literature that Regnery hoped would legitimize his calls to build a white ethnostate.

“Though he usually operated in the background, Regnery was an extremely influentia­l figure in the radical right,” Miller said.

In 2016, an Associated Press review of tax records found that the National Policy Institute, founded by Regnery, and three other groups at the forefront of the white nationalis­t movement had registered as charities and raised more than $7.8 million in tax-deductible donations over the previous decade.

Regnery spent much of his life using his family’s money to build the institutio­nal infrastruc­ture that would support the so-called alt-right — an offshoot of conservati­sm mixing racism, white nationalis­m, anti-Semitism and populism — and help to propel figures like Richard Spencer into the spotlight, Miller said.

“Regnery’s real legacy is not what he built, but the immense harm that he caused,” she said.

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