Fringe Racists, Conspiracy Theorists Make Bids for Office
Most of those who follow extremism and extremist candidates in the political mainstream are focused tightly on the presidential bid of Donald Trump. But there are a number of other races featuring unusual candidates around the country.
In Tennessee, Rick Tyler, an independent candidate for the state鈥檚 3rd Congressional District, put up a billboard that read, 鈥淢ake America White Again,鈥 and specifically credited Donald Trump for 鈥渓oosen[ing] up the overall spectrum of political discourse.鈥 According to Raw Story, he also planned another billboard, this one reading, 鈥淢amas, don鈥檛 let your babies grow up to be miscegenators.鈥
In Montana, Taylor Rose, who was once vice president of the now-defunct racist campus group Youth for Western Civilization, is running for District 3 of the state House of Representatives. Rose is a former writer for WorldNetDaily, a 鈥渘ews鈥 site that once ran a six-part series claiming that eating soy causes homosexuality. In 2011, he travelled to Europe and met with members of the extreme-right Vlaams Belang party, where he was seen communing with German extremists.
Tony Horvater, a self-described white nationalist, is running for the New Carlisle, Ohio, City Council. Last year, Horvater was a participant in a conference hosted by the white supremacist American Renaissance journal, which regularly publishes articles characterizing black people as 鈥減sychopathic.鈥 Horvater has denounced 鈥渢hird world immigration,鈥 worried that white men鈥檚 taxes are too high, and claimed that Jews are a driving force behind gun control. He is running as the first-ever candidate of the Traditionalist Workers Party, another racist group.
In Ohio, Jim Condit Jr. ran on the Green Party ticket for the state鈥檚 8th Congressional District in a special election to serve the remainder of the term of House Speaker John Boehner, who resigned in October 2015. Condit has charged that the Federal Reserve Bank is working to force the United States into a socialistic 鈥淣ew World Order,鈥 accused 鈥淶ionists鈥 of infiltrating the Vatican II conference of the 1960s that renounced anti-Semitism in the Catholic Church, and claimed that Israel planned to benefit from the 9/11 terror attacks.
Condit announced in May that he would be interviewing on his radio show Christopher Bollyn, 鈥淸t]he man viewed by many as the world鈥檚 top Investigative Reporter.鈥 Bollyn is a raging anti-Semite who called the 9/11 attack 鈥渁 monstrous Jewish-Zionist crime鈥 whose authors were 鈥減rotected by a gang of like-minded Jewish Zionists in the highest positions of the U.S. government.鈥 Condit also said he would be exploring 鈥渢he hidden origins of Communism鈥 in an upcoming show.
But Condit lost the June election, taking just over 2% of the vote.
And then there鈥檚 Michele Fiore, the two-term Nevada assemblywoman who ran for the state鈥檚 3rd Congressional District. Fiore is famous for supporting the Bundy gang in their 2014 armed standoff with federal officials in her state, and their subsequent standoff in Oregon earlier this year. Last November, Fiore told a radio host: 鈥淚 am not okay with Syrian refugees. I鈥檓 not okay with terrorists. I鈥檓 okay with putting them down, blacking them out. Just put a piece of brass in their ocular cavity and end their miserable life. I鈥檓 good with that.鈥 She also said this year that if a police officer pointed a gun at her, she would shoot to kill. She later claimed she had only been referring to agents of the Bureau of Land Management 鈥 the nemesis of the Bundys and their supporters, many of whom now face criminal charges.
Arguing for a bill that would allow doctors to try unapproved treatments for the terminally ill, Fiore, who has no medical training, suggested that 鈥渃ancer, which I believe is a fungus,鈥 could be 鈥渇lushed out鈥 with a salt water solution.
It all proved too much for Nevada voters. In the state鈥檚 June primary, Fiore lost her congressional bid, coming in third with just 18% of the vote.