The Guardian (USA)

Missouri Republican­s disown Ku Klux Klanlinked candidate for governor

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

The Missouri Republican party sought to distance itself from a candidate for governor linked to the Ku Klux Klan, saying it would remove him from the ballot.

In a statement, the party said it had been “made aware that Darrell Leon McClanahan III filed for governor as a Republican despite his affiliatio­n with the Ku Klux Klan, which fundamenta­lly contradict­s our party’s values and platform.

“We have begun the process of having Mr McClanahan removed from the ballot as a Republican candidate. We condemn any associatio­n with hate groups and are taking immediate action to rectify this situation.”

The Klan was organised as a racist terror group after the defeat of the slave-holding Confederac­y in the civil war. Beaten back by President Ulysses S Grant, the Klan was resurgent in the Jim Crow years of racial segregatio­n in southern states.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors extremist groups, calls the Klan “the oldest and most infamous of American hate groups”, adding: “Although Black Americans have typically been the Klan’s primary target, adherents also attack Jewish people, [immigrants] and members of the LGBTQ+ community.”

After McClanahan declared for governor, a picture showing him appearing to give a Nazi salute in front of a burning cross – a symbol of Klan terror – circulated widely online.

As reported by the Riverfront Times, a Missouri news site, the picture first appeared when McClanahan ran for US Senate in 2022, on the website of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which fights antisemiti­sm.

The ADL identified McClanahan as “an adherent of the racist and antisemiti­c religious sect Christian Identity” who attended events organised by a Klan group and wrote for a Klan-linked newsletter about “about his radicalisa­tion in the wake of the Unite the Right rally in 2017”, when white supremacis­ts marched in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, in support of Donald Trump.

The ADL also published an image from Russian social media showing McClanahan using a different name and the phrase “white power”.

McClanahan sued for defamation, arguing, as the Riverfront Times put it, “that what appeared to be a cross-burning was a mere ‘Christian Identity Cross lighting ceremony’”.

“While he acknowledg­ed he was a ‘honorary’ member of the local Ku Klux Klan,” the site added, McClanahan “said he’d never been a full-fledged member”.

A judge dismissed McClanahan’s suit, writing: “The complaint itself reflects that plaintiff holds the views ascribed to him by the ADL article, that is the characteri­sation of his social media presence and views as antisemiti­c, white supremacis­t, antigovern­ment and bigoted.”

On Thursday, the Missouri Republican party said: “Our party upholds respect for all individual­s, and we’re dedicated to addressing any challenges to these principles decisively.”

McClanahan said “the Missouri GOP knew exactly who I am” and alleged the state chair “told me when I signed up for Senate, paying my $500 fee … he had vetted me and knew I was a Christian identist and that I should just not say anything bad about the Jews”.

McClanahan also alleged Jay Ashcroft – the Missouri secretary of state, a candidate for governor and the son of John Ashcroft, an ex-governor, senator and US attorney general, once told him “the Blacks are a problem”.

The Missouri Republican party were “a bunch of anti-white hypocrites”, McClanahan said.

Jay Ashcroft called the allegation­s against McClanahan “serious and the photos damning”, adding: “Racism has no place in our party.”

Laura Burkhardt, a campaigner for gun control, tweeted a picture that appeared to show Ashcroft with McClanahan and to have been posted in January. McClanahan posted the same picture.

 ?? ?? The Ku Klux Klan protests on 8 July 2017 in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. According to the ADL, McClanahan wrote for a Klan-linked newsletter ‘about his radicalisa­tion in the wake of the Unite the Right rally in 2017’. Photograph: Chet Strange/Getty Images
The Ku Klux Klan protests on 8 July 2017 in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. According to the ADL, McClanahan wrote for a Klan-linked newsletter ‘about his radicalisa­tion in the wake of the Unite the Right rally in 2017’. Photograph: Chet Strange/Getty Images

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