The Million MAGA March brings together Republican politicians, Trump supporters, white nationalists, neo-Nazis, and violent hate groups.
Read MoreRep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) defends the Proud Boys during a segment on his podcast after being photographed with members acting as security guards at an event he attended.
Read MoreEric Trump attended a boat rally with a far-right activist prone to violence and friendly with white supremacists.
Read MoreTo the delight of white supremacists across the country, Trump refuses to condemn them, instead instructing a hate group to “stand back and stand by.”
Read MoreMylinda Mason co-organized an event with the Proud Boys (a white nationalist hate group), QAnon believers (antisemitic conspiracy theorists), and the California Straight Pride Coalition (a white supremacist group whose own leader described it as a “totally peaceful, racist group”), outside of a Planned Parenthood Clinic.
Read MoreRep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) spends 4th of July in Prescott, AZ, where he poses for a photo with at least one member of the Proud Boys, a violent far-right extremist hate group. Nearby were people wearing t-shirts indicating them as members of two other hate groups, the Oath Keepers and the Boogaloo Boys.
Read MoreJim Hagedorn (R-MN), who ran antisemitic campaign advertisements in the 2018 midterm elections, refers to “Judeo-Christian values” in a racist attack against the Black Lives Matter movement. He then accused the Black-led movement, which has been the focus of multiple antisemitic conspiracy theories, of waging war against “western values.”
Read MoreRepublican politicians have praised these “Reopen” protests from the start, and continue to do so even as the involvement of antisemitic and white nationalist groups grows — from overtly antisemitic signs, to the presence of the Proud Boys, to the involvement of people who attended Unite The Right in Charlottesville in 2017, to messaging comparing Democratic governors to Hitler and stay-at-home orders to Nazi takeovers.
Read MoreThe Young Republicans National Federation names Gavin Wax as Chair of the Association of Young Republican Clubs. Wax associates with the Proud Boys, a violent hate group, and has invited white nationalists and antisemites like Michelle Malkin, Nick Fuentes, and Gavin McInnes to speak at prominent Republican events.
Read MoreAn estimated 22,000 neo-Nazis, white nationalists, hate group members, and gun rights advocates — many of them heavily armed — rally in Richmond, VA, on MLK Day, claiming they are taking action in opposition to proposed gun violence prevention legislation.
Read MoreMorgan Bolles applies and is appointed to the Fennville MI, City Commission. Within one week of taking office, Bolles is exposed as being a member of the Proud Boys, a violent hate group.
Read MoreDan Bishop (R-NC), an early investor in Gab, a Nazi recruitment site, wins a special election for U.S. Congress.
Read MoreThe Plaquemines Parish Sheriff's Office in Louisiana terminates Deputy Sheriff Brian Green after he is exposed as a member of the Proud Boys, a violent hate group.
Read MoreCorey Breier, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’s Chairman for Jewish Outreach is spotted attending multiple events with members of violent hate group, the Proud Boys.
Read MoreNelson Diaz (Chairman of Miami-Dade County Republicans) and Corey Breier (now-Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Miami-Dade County Jewish Outreach Chairman), join the Proud Boys at a local protest against Democrats. Diaz is filmed banging on a door of the building where the protest is taking place.
Read MoreNew York State Senator Marty Golden (R) refuses to fire Ian Reilly, a campaign staffer who is also the member of violent hate group the Proud Boys.
Read MoreThe Metropolitan Republican Club hosts Gavin McInnes, founder of the violent hate group the Proud Boys, to speak. After the event, dozens of Proud Boys violently attack several protestors.
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