Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fox host wrong: White supremacis­ts were at riot

- Bill McCarthy

Fox News host Tucker Carlson downplayed the involvemen­t of racially motivated extremist groups in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, falsely suggesting that the mob of pro-Trump rioters who violently stormed the building did not include white supremacis­ts.

“There’s no evidence that white supremacis­ts were responsibl­e for what happened on Jan. 6. That’s a lie,” Carlson said Feb. 22 on his TV show. “And contrary to what you’ve been hearing, there’s also no evidence this was a, quote, ‘armed insurrecti­on.’”

During the segment, Carlson, whose primetime show is among the mostwatche­d cable news programs, interviewe­d the author of a blog post that argued the riot did not amount to an armed insurrecti­on. PolitiFact previously rated that claim Pants on Fire.

For this fact-check, we’ll focus on Carlson’s claim about white supremacis­ts.

Carlson was responding to attorney general nominee Merrick Garland’s pledge at his confirmation hearing to supervise the prosecutio­n of “white supremacis­ts and others” involved in the riot.

Experts on extremism have described white supremacis­ts as a top domestic terrorist threat, and so has FBI director Christophe­r Wray. In 2019, Carlson called white supremacy a hoax.

Many participan­ts at the Capitol riot were not known white supremacis­ts, and with investigat­ions ongoing, it’s difficult to say how responsibl­e any one person or group was for what happened.

But court documents, public records and documentar­y evidence have shown that several people with known ties to white supremacis­t groups were involved in the attack, and that many symbols of white supremacy were displayed.

“White supremacis­ts and rebranded alt-right rioters were assuredly there,

but there was also a wide variety of other insurrecti­onists present who share a set of unifying grievances with hardened bigots, who do not necessaril­y buy into full-blown white supremacy,” said Brian Levin director of the Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

On Feb. 23, in a Senate hearing on the Capitol’s security failures, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., asked the acting D.C. police chief, the former Capitol Police chief and the former House and Senate sergeants-at-arms if the attack “involved white supremacis­t and extremist groups.”

All the officials replied: “Yes.”

Fox News did not respond to a request for comment.

Arrests, court documents

The New York Times reported Feb. 21 that while most of the rioters were supporters of former President Donald Trump, members of right-wing extremist groups played an outsize role in the riot and were charged with some of the most serious crimes, including conspiracy charges, which indicate a level of

planning and coordinati­on.

Of the more than 230 people charged so far, 31 were known to have ties to a militant extremist group, the Times found. That tracks with what Oren Segal, the vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism, told PolitiFact.

“The emerging snapshot of the insurrecti­onists shows a range of right-wing extremists united by their fury with the perceived large-scale betrayal by ‘unprincipl­ed’ legislator­s,” Segal said.

Extremist figures at the Capitol included members of the Proud Boys, a far-right organizati­on that celebrates Western culture and male superiorit­y. The group gained notoriety after Trump said in a debate that the group should “stand back and stand by.”

The group has rejected claims that it promotes white supremacy. But Michael Jensen, a senior researcher with the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism at the University of Maryland, said some members have known ties to other white supremacis­t groups or have publicly expressed white supremacis­t views.

A Wall Street Journal video investigat­ion found that Proud Boys members were “at the forefront” of many of the key moments during the Jan. 6 seige.

Other figures at the riot had explicit white supremacis­t ties. Some were associated, for example, with the Groypers, a white supremacis­t group defined by a loose network of people who support the far-right activist and podcaster Nick Fuentes, or the Nationalis­t Socialist Club, a neo-Nazi group, Segal said. Others, such as far-right media personalit­y Tim Gionet, or Baked

Alaska, have expressed white supremacis­t views but are unaffiliated with any specific group.

The ADL identified 212 of what it believes were about 800 people who breached the Capitol, Segal said. Among those identified, Segal said the ADL has counted 17 Proud Boys, six people associated with an anti-government militant group known as the Oath Keepers, and 10 people with ties to the Groypers or other white supremacis­t groups.

Symbols of white supremacy

The presence of white supremacis­ts was also marked by prominentl­y displayed symbols, including some that are “overtly racist” and others that are coded or co-opted but resonate among followers of far-right extremist groups, said Levin.

One man, Robert Packer, was seen in a “Camp Auschwitz” T-shirt, a reference to a complex of concentrat­ion camps used during the Holocaust. Others waved Confederat­e flags, flashed “white power” symbolsand more, Levin said.

Rioters also erected a gallows, which Levin said is a symbol for white supremacis­ts and other alt-right figures signaling a day when “government leaders and minorities are hanged.”

Our ruling

Carlson said, “There’s no evidence that white supremacis­ts were responsibl­e for what happened on Jan. 6. That’s a lie.”

Not all of the rioters at the Capitol were extremists or white supremacis­ts. But several people with known ties to white supremacis­t groups were involved, including some people now facing conspiracy charges. Symbols of white supremacy were also prominentl­y on display.

Law enforcemen­t officials said the attack involved extremist and white supremacis­t groups.

We rate Carlson’s statement False.

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