The Guardian (USA)

Ron DeSantis ally Chris Rufo has close ties with ‘dissident right’ magazine

- Jason Wilson

Chris Rufo, a rightwing culture-war celebrity and close Ron DeSantis ally, has maintained a close relationsh­ip with IM-1776, a “dissident right” magazine that regularly showers praise on dictators and authoritar­ians, puffs racist ideologues, and attacks liberal democracy.

The outlet’s editors and writers – many of them so-called “anons” working under pseudonyms – have variously advocated for the repeal of the Civil Rights Act; celebrated figures such as the “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski and the proto-fascist Italian nationalis­t Gabriele D’Annunzio; and advanced conspiracy theories about the Covid pandemic, and what they term the “regime”, a leftist power structure that they imagine unites the state, large corporatio­ns, universiti­es and the media.

Rufo and IM-1776

The Guardian has previously reported on Rufo’s links with an outlet that experts described as pushing scientific racism; with a Danish data scientist who had previously co-authored scientific-racist papers; and on co-hosting an audio stream on X in which one participan­t advocated cooperatin­g with a hypothetic­al white nationalis­t leader.

Rufo, who played a leading role in the downfall of Harvard president Claudine Gay, has said such reporting is “guilt by associatio­n”, but his relationsh­ip with IM-1776 is explicitly collaborat­ive and supportive, and the associatio­n is apparently mutually beneficial.

Last month a “manifesto” written by Rufo – The New Right Activism – ran in the online and print versions of IM-1776, and Rufo has publicly urged his audience to buy and subscribe to the outlet. He has also co-hosted a series of Twitter spaces with the magazine’s editors, beginning in July last year.

In one of them, recorded in October, he indicated an interest in incorporat­ing the “dissident right” more fully in mainstream political discourse, saying: “I think there is a room for engaging the dissident right and the establishm­ent right. I think we need to have a bridge between the two and and engage in thoughtful dialogue.”

More recently, he has expressed a personal interest in expanding the range of acceptable political discourse.

On the Pirate Wires podcast earlier this month, he told host Mike Solana of his own activism: “I try to play that game, I try to lay traps, I try to provoke certain reactions, I try to launder certain words and phrases into the discourse.”

The Guardian emailed Rufo detailed questions about his relationsh­ip with IM-1776, what if any concerns he

had about content on the site, and which words or phrases he had laundered into the discourse, but received no response.

Dr Julian Waller, a research analyst at the Center for Naval Analyses and a professori­al lecturer at George Washington University, said: “Rufo is very intentiona­lly acting as a bridging actor between people to his right – in a variety of dimensions and different ideologica­l segments – and the more institutio­nal establishm­ent world: the harder right of American politics.”

He said: “In the American context, the closest thing we have to a post-liberal government – and I won’t say dissident right, I’ll say post-liberal – is the DeSantis administra­tion in Florida, and Chris Rufo’s activist legislativ­e packages have been used by that state forthright­ly.”

Mark Granza, by his own account an Italian national living in Hungary, is the founder and editor-in-chief of IM-1776. He has returned Rufo’s public admiration. Granza was interviewe­d in February last year by the conservati­ve Rod Dreher in the Hungarian Conservati­ve, an outlet aligned with the authoritar­ian government of Viktor Orbán where Dreher writes as a fellow of the state-funded Danube Institute.

Granza said of Rufo that “he doesn’t care about convincing the other side, or battling in the ‘marketplac­e of ideas’. He’s going to tell you what he’s going to do, and then do it, whether you agree with him or not.”

Granza added: “That’s what I believe conservati­ves should do: use whatever power they have or can get and impose their views on to society.”

Authoritar­ian sympathies

Authoritar­ian sentiments like this also feed into IM-1776’s political enthusiasm­s. The magazine has been especially supportive of El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele, who suspended civil liberties in 2022 as part of a crackdown on alleged gang members that has seen about 75,000 people arrested without charge – more than 1% of the country’s total population.

The Guardian previously reported warnings from Salvadoran opposition figures, human rights groups and journalist­s that Bukele’s populist, bitcoinfue­led presidency is in danger of developing into an authoritar­ian state: Bukele has referred to himself as the “world’s coolest dictator”.

On Twitter in September 2022, Granza characteri­zed Bukele and Orbán’s authoritar­ian moves on crime and immigratio­n as reminders of “the existence of the deep state in the west”. In March last year he posted: “America needs its own Bukele. Build massive prisons and start by throwing in every single regime apparatchi­k.”

Political figures who receive regular praise in IM-1776 include the Italian proto-fascist D’Annunzio, who was the subject of a three-article “symposium” on the site in 2021.

D’Annunzio, a poet and a first world war pilot, led Italian nationalis­ts in seizing the city of Fiume after it had been given to Croatia in the Versailles settlement. In the months in which he governed it as an independen­t regency, D’Annunzio’s innovation­s included the use of Roman salutes, balcony speeches to crowds, and deploying black-shirted followers to repress opponents. All of these and more were later taken up and used by Mussolini’s fascist regime.

Another favorite is Russian president Valdimir Putin, of whom a pseudonymo­us author asked at IM-1776 this week: “Is this the last real statesman?”

Rehabilita­tions

IM-1776 regularly runs articles that attempt to rehabilita­te lesser known far-right thinkers and even convicted terrorists.

Benjamin Braddock bylined a May 2022 interview with Renaud Camus, the French novelist, white nationalis­t and conspiracy theorist who coined the “Great Replacemen­t” as a book title and as descriptio­n of a purported plot by “replacist elites” to substitute immigrants for white Europeans.

Camus’s slogan inspired white nationalis­t chants at Charlottes­ville, Virginia; was borrowed as the title of the manifesto written by the man who massacred 52 Muslims in two mass shootings in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, in March 2019; and also motivated the man who killed 10 Black people in the car park of a market in Buffalo in May 2022.

In Braddock’s deferentia­l interview, Camus characteri­zes these “replacist” elites as “Davos, bankers, internatio­nal finance, multinatio­nal companies, pension funds, hedge funds, big five, and all kind of more or less private powers”.

Last June, IM-1776 published an obituary of Ted Kaczynski by another pseudonymo­us author calling themselves “The Prudential­ist”.

Kaczynski died in a federal prison last year at the conclusion of a life sentence he received for a 17-year mailbombin­g campaign that killed three of his targets and injured 23 others.

Describing Kaczynski as “allegedly a lone wolf terrorist, but also a mathematic­al genius”, the IM-1776 author relativize­d his crimes and explained that Kaczynski’s “iconic status on the contempora­ry right can be partly attributed to the devastatin­g critique of the left included in his famous manifesto, Industrial Society and Its Future”.

Charles Haywood

Other IM-1776 contributo­rs go even further in rhetorical attacks on the left.

One regular contributo­r to and apparent funder of IM-1776 is the former shampoo manufactur­er and would-be “warlord” Charles Haywood. Haywood is bylined in six articles published on the IM-1776 website.

In several of these articles, he uses eliminatio­nist language in relation to his perceived enemies.

In one, a dialogue with fellow IM-1776 regular Daniel Miller, Haywood writes that the goal of the right must be “the total, permanent defeat of the left, of the ideology at the heart of the Enlightenm­ent”, and later that “our society is commanded to excise the limitless, satanic evils brought on us by the left”.

Elsewhere, in a glowing review of Rufo’s book, America’s Cultural Revolution, Haywood says that it shows that “we might have to accept we can’t live with these people, the five or ten percent of our nation who lead or are most active in supporting the left”, and goes on to demand the repeal of the “socalled Civil Rights Act”.

Waller, the political analyst, included Haywood as one of three case studies in a working paper on writers providing “advocacy in favor of genuine authoritar­ian regimes – ones which outright reject the basic structural and constituti­onal premises of modern electoral democracy”.

In conversati­on he said that he included Haywood in the paper as one of the writers who “… think democracy is bad, and that actually an authoritar­ian regime is good … it’s rare in the contempora­ry period for someone to be that open about these sorts of things.”

In a separate review of First Do No Harm, a book on Covid by a pseudonymo­us author who claims to be a doctor, Haywood claims that Covid “‘vaccines’ aren’t vaccines at all, but prophylact­ic/therapeuti­c drugs of very limited efficacy”.

In October 2022, Granza was interviewe­d on the YouTube channel of the Afrikaner nationalis­t activist Ernst van Zyl. In the interview, Granza indicated that beyond writing for IM-1776, Haywood stepped in at a crucial moment to keep IM-1776 alive.

During the pandemic, Granza said, he was “completely incapable of continuing to fund the project. I had to find another job, and Charles Haywood pitched in.”

Donations via Claremont

Beyond asking for subscripti­ons, IM-1776 solicits donations on a page on their website, but potential donors who click on the “tax deductible donations” are routed to a form on the rightwing Claremont Institute’s website, where Claremont advises: “The Claremont Institute is serving as a fiscal sponsor of IM-1776/the Art & Literature Foundation until they get fully establishe­d as a non-profit. Their commitment to the promotion of cultural work that draws on and promotes the beauty and truth of the natural order is well within the Claremont Institute’s mission.”

The Guardian emailed Mark Granza with questions about content on the site and his own political sympathies. He did not respond directly but sent a reply email with an attached image of a hackneyed meme.

The Guardian also emailed Charles Haywood with questions about funding arrangemen­ts at IM-1776, content on the site, and their own public pronouncem­ents, but received no response.

 ?? Photograph: Thomas Simonetti/The Washington Post/Getty Images ?? Newly appointed trustee Christophe­r Rufo talks to faculty and staff on the campus of New College of Florida in Sarasota, in January 2023.
Photograph: Thomas Simonetti/The Washington Post/Getty Images Newly appointed trustee Christophe­r Rufo talks to faculty and staff on the campus of New College of Florida in Sarasota, in January 2023.

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