The Guardian (USA)

‘More extreme, more violent’: experts’ warning over khaki-clad Patriot Front

- Adam Gabbatt in New York

For years, there has been an element of the ridiculous to Patriot Front and their rallies, which can look like a sort of cosplay version of a white nationalis­t movement.

At a Patriot Front demonstrat­ion in Washington in May, more than a hundred Patriot Front members marched along the National Mall wearing matching outfits of beige or brown chinos and blue button-up shirts.

The ensemble was topped off with the sort of affected accessoriz­ing that parents subject children to at weddings: each man was required to wear sandcolore­d suspenders, with matching hats and sewn-on arm patches.

In their hands, the Patriot Front members carried shields that were a derivative version of Captain America’s defense system, and they had tight white fabric wrapped around their faces. The goal of their activity – Patriot Front aims to create a white ethnostate, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center – is serious, but they found themselves ripe for ridicule.

“You wear Walmart khakis!” one bystander heckled. “You are sloppy! You are not even matching! You all have different types of pants on! Cargo pants are out! Reclaim your virginity!”

In the years following Patriot Front’s 2017 inception, however, they have slowly grown in influence and threat, experts say. In 2023, those who monitor hate groups say Patriot Front is increasing­ly moving towards public displays and violence.

“If you asked me about Patriot Front in 2017 or 2018, I’d say they’re looking for attention. They’re putting up some stickers, and doing some banner drops here and there, and it’s all about just getting in the news. But now it’s gone well beyond that,” said Stephen Piggott, a researcher at Western States Center who focuses on white nationalis­t, paramilita­ry and anti-democracy groups.

“I think the group is morphing from a solely propaganda-based outfit to a much more violent one, based on what we’ve seen over the past couple of years. They’re trending to much more violence, more in-person direct actions, versus putting up stickers under the cover of night.”

Patriot Front formed in 2017, having splintered from the white nationalis­t group Vanguard America in the wake of the deadly Unite the Right Rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. Led by Thomas Rousseau, Patriot Front initially focused on clandestin­e propaganda efforts: dropping racist literature in neighborho­ods and posting stickers in public places.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, Patriot Front was responsibl­e for the vast majority of “hateful propaganda” in the US in 2019, 2020 and 2021. In the past couple of years, the group has begun to venture more into the daylight, and held more rallies and demonstrat­ions.

The leadership has stayed the same, under Thomas Rousseau, a Texasbased extremist. But Patriot Front has changed.

“I think it’s indicative of the movement. The white nationalis­t movement more broadly is getting more extreme, more hardcore, more violent,” Piggott said.

That violence has been seen across the US. In May, Joe Biden described white supremacy as “the most dangerous terrorist threat” to the country. This week, a University of Chicago poll found that 12 million American adults, or 4.4% of the adult population, believe violence is justified to restore Donald Trump to the White House.

Antisemiti­c incidents, meanwhile, rose in the US in 2022; there was an increase in anti-Asian American hate crimes over the past two years; and a recent FBI report found that hate crimes as a whole rose by nearly 12% from 2020 to 2021.

“There’s a backlash to gains made by marginaliz­ed communitie­s: I think marginaliz­ed communitie­s are more represente­d, and have become more a political force as well. The white nationalis­t movement also sees what’s going on in terms of demographi­cs, and are not happy with the diminishin­g white majority of the country,” Piggott said.

“And then also really since the election of Donald Trump, we’ve seen white nationalis­t discourse being much more mainstream. That’s provided a bump for these groups in terms of they’re very happy to see when elected officials and others are kind of speaking their language, using their rhetoric.

“I think it’s almost like a green light for them to conduct the activities that they’re engaged in.”

For Patriot Front, those activities have meant scenes like those in June last year in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Police arrested 31 members of the group after they were found packed into the back of a rental truck with riot gear. The men, who an eyewitness told police “looked like a little army”, were charged with conspiracy to riot.

A month later Charles Murrell, a Black artist, was attacked during a Patriot Front march in Boston, Massachuse­tts. The group has since held marches in Indianapol­is and a rally in Chattanoog­a, Tennessee. This year, a group of about 25 Patriot Front members protested against a drag brunch in Nashville and conducted their Washington march.

“Patriot Front worries me a lot more than other groups because of the amount of public activism that they commit to,” said Jeff Tischauser, a senior research analyst with the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligen­ce Project.

“Any time you get these volatile, unhinged people coming into close contact with the public, situations can escalate. That’s what I worry about, because they’re in public space more than any other group.

“And you’re gonna have courageous people like Charles Murrell stand up and say, ‘We don’t want you here.’ That’s going to be a combustibl­e situation with the people that they have within the organizati­on.”

There has been a rise in white nationalis­m and far-right politics in countries around the world in recent years. In Germany, the far-right, anti-immigrant Alternativ­e for Germany has surged in recent polling, while last year Giorgia Meloni, whose radical-right Brothers of Italy party has neo-fascist roots, was elected prime minister of Italy.

In the US, though, there is an extra threat. About four in 10 adult Americans live in a household with a firearm, and mass shootings are commonplac­e. A year on from Patriot Front’s march in Coeur d’Alene, the targeting of LGBTQ communitie­s is a continuing risk, Tischauser said.

“We’re worried about Pride Month. We’re worried about teachers. There are groups that are out in public, that are showing up at LGBTQ-inclusive events, harassing and intimidati­ng participan­ts, which include children,” Tischauser said.

“And I’m worried about the high concentrat­ion of guns that we have in this country, and this contentiou­s movement that’s becoming more hostile and more aggressive, it seems, by the day. And Patriot Front is right in the middle of that.”

 ?? Nathan Posner/Shuttersto­ck ?? Members of the far-right Patriot Front at a rally in Washington in May. Photograph:
Nathan Posner/Shuttersto­ck Members of the far-right Patriot Front at a rally in Washington in May. Photograph:
 ?? Agency/Getty Images ?? More extreme, say experts: the marchers at the Washington rally. Photograph: Anadolu
Agency/Getty Images More extreme, say experts: the marchers at the Washington rally. Photograph: Anadolu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States