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Washington Lands Candidate 'Definitely Regrets' Being Pulled Into Antigovernment Orbit

Republican Steve McLaughlin signed onto a letter protesting the Hammonds' arrest, and the next thing he knew, his biggest supporters were 'Patriots.'

It seemed like a fine idea at the time.


Steve McLaughlin, candidate for Washington state Public Lands Commissioner

When Steve McLaughlin, freshly announced as a Republican candidate for Washington state鈥檚 Commissioner of Lands last fall, was approached by a state legislator from the Coalition of Westerns States (COWS) about joining their protest of the imminent re-arrest of , he gladly signed on.

After all, the man who approached him 鈥 Rep. Matt Shea, R-Spokane Valley 鈥 is not only an elected official, he鈥檚 a ranking member of the state House GOP caucus. And McLaughlin, who grew up in southern Oregon, was familiar with the case of Dwight and Steve Hammond 鈥 Oregon ranchers聽being 鈥 and was sympathetic to their cause.

鈥淚f an elected guy calls me on the phone and asks for my help, I鈥檓 gonna give it to him, I don鈥檛 care who it is,鈥 McLaughlin told Hatewatch. 鈥淚 believe in serving our community.鈥

McLaughlin鈥檚 eventual experience, however, proved something of a cautionary fable for well-meaning conservatives seduced by the rhetoric of antigovernment "Patriots"聽into lending their good names for these extremists鈥 own bids for legitimacy.

Because before he knew it, McLaughlin was knee-deep in a claque of radical supporters.

鈥淚 definitely regret being pulled into that orbit,鈥 he told Hatewatch. McLaughlin said he wants nothing to do with either their radical anti-federal lands agenda or their warped conspiracism. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not who I am,鈥 he said.

What he didn鈥檛 realize at the time was that Shea (who has a long history of antigovernment 鈥淧atriot鈥 movement activism) and his associates 鈥 including state Rep. Michelle Fiore of Nevada, Rep. Heather Scott of Idaho, and 鈥渓iberty speaker鈥 Gavin Seim 鈥 comprised a working group of antigovernment extremists whose attack of聽federal ownership of public lands would soon reach its apotheosis in the January takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon.

So McLaughlin鈥檚 name appeared (as the group鈥檚 鈥淰eterans Coordinator鈥) on聽a COWS press release on聽Dec. 11,聽decrying the Hammonds鈥 re-imprisonment. It also described 鈥渁 literal, intentional conspiracy to deprive ranchers of their property rights throughout the west,鈥 and claimed that it intended to 鈥渙nce and for all restore management of public lands to the states where it belongs.鈥

Appearing alongside McLaughlin鈥檚 name on the release聽was a virtual Who鈥檚 Who of the Western antigovernment movement鈥檚 radical land-use contingent, many of them closely associated with the armed standoff between federal agents and supporters of rancher Cliven Bundy near Bunkerville, Nev., in April 2015.聽

They were:聽Shea, Fiore, Seim, and Scott, as well as Anthony Bosworth, the beneficiary of a Patriot protest in Spokane in 2015 and the award given annually by Shea; Kris Anne Hall, a popular 鈥渃onstitutionalist鈥 talk-show host; and Richard Mack, the founder and leader of the far-right Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association. Within the next month and a half, every one of these people would become players in the drama that unfolded at the Malheur.

When two of Cliven Bundy鈥檚 sons, Ammon and Ryan, led a cohort of 鈥渃onstitutionalist鈥 supporters in taking over the Malheur refuge on Jan. 3, McLaughlin was appalled, and quietly withdrew his support for COWS. He聽says he remained opposed to the standoff, especially as it drew to a close with the arrests of multiple participants (and the death of one militant, rancher LaVoy Finicum of Utah) and an eventual negotiated end to the 41-day standoff itself.

However, McLaughlin鈥檚 association with COWS聽was the primary factor in his subsequent listing as part of a group of Northwest politicians and elected officials who had lined up in support of the Bundys鈥 extremist land-right agenda.

For聽months,聽McLaughlin remained pulled into the 鈥淧atriot鈥 orbit.聽

鈥⒙營n June, by Northwest antigovernment extremist聽John Jacob Schmidt, one of the leaders of the that wants to carve out a 鈥淧atriots only鈥 homeland in the interior Northwest, including Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and portions of eastern Washington and Oregon. Schmidt described McLaughlin as a 鈥淕od-fearing patriot鈥 and McLaughlin himself urged listeners to donate to his campaign 鈥渢o get a good patriot into office.鈥 In response to a question by Schmidt about the 鈥淎genda 21鈥 conspiracy theory favored by right-wing extremists,聽McLaughlin seemed to go along: 鈥淢y plan is to restore balance on our public lands that are way out of balance,鈥 he said. "And an unintended consequence of what the more radical elements in our society have attempted over the past 30 years to meet that Agenda 2030. And it鈥檚 not working. It鈥檚 failing.鈥

鈥 The next week, McLaughlin was a featured speaker at the 21st annual in the small northeastern Washington town of Marble; the annual gathering there is uniformly 鈥渃onstitutionalist鈥 in its orientation, and this year鈥檚 celebration was especially focused on the Malheur standoff, featuring numerous speakers and panels sympathetic to the occupiers鈥 beliefs (not to mention various discussions of the martyrdom of Finicum). No recording of McLaughlin鈥檚 speech to the gathering could be found, but an audience member, who requested anonymity, said聽McLaughlin had expressed sympathy with a number of antigovernment positions regarding federal lands, and that,he had made the audience feel 鈥渉e was one of us.鈥 McLaughlin reportedly also said that he planned to offer an 鈥渁ttenuated鈥 message when he campaigned on the western (and more liberal) half of the state, but he hoped the audience would be understanding of the shift.

鈥 At in the northeastern Washington town of Chewelah, McLaughlin was introduced to the crowd by Stevens County Commissioner Steve Parker, an ardent supporter of the COWS federal-lands agenda and one of the officials listed as a land-rights extremist in the 人兽性交鈥檚 report on Northwest political officials.

McLaughlin gave Hatewatch reasonable explanations for all these associations, mostly the result, he said, of his own embrace of patriotic values. He聽was a Navy Commander and a veteran of 25 years鈥 service, but yet he聽was utterly unaware, he says, of the radical right-wing agenda hidden behind the flag-waving fa莽ade.

  • He only signed onto the COWS letter, he says, because of the Hammonds. Indeed, Matt Shea explained to Seattle Times reporter in a September email that McLaughlin shared with Hatewatch: 鈥淪teve was (and is) not a member of the Coalition. We had previously discussed veterans issues in Olympia due to his extensive experience and background. Consequently, I reached out to Steve to help regarding veterans outreach for the Hammond situation only 鈥︹
  • McLaughlin said he鈥檚 had professional associations related to emergency-management situations with Schmidt before appearing on his Internet radio show, but that nothing Schmidt had ever said in his presence indicated his extremist inclinations.
  • He had been invited to the Marble celebration without being aware of the nature of the annual gathering. 鈥淚 went there to speak and I gave my standard stump speech. I talked about stewardship of lands, fire management, and the leadership of the DNR. I then fielded a series of questions, a bunch of questions, and they ranged from reasonable to 鈥 pretty crazy. And, you know, I learned long ago never to look down on people who participated. They鈥檙e concerned about the future of our country. So I just went there and did it 鈥 I didn鈥檛 know what it was all about. And then I left.鈥 He insists that he neither made the pro-鈥渃onstitutionalist鈥 remarks attributed to him, nor did he endorse them.
  • He says he was unaware of Parker鈥檚 role in the federal-lands takeover agenda, and only appeared at the Chewelah event, which Parker hosted, because he had been invited to speak. He says he only gave his standard stump speech there, too.

Most of all, he utterly disavows any aspect of the antigovernment movement鈥檚 federal lands agenda. 鈥淚 grew up in the Northwest. And I grew up fishing, and hunting聽and hiking on federal public lands, and I know what a treasure they are,鈥 McLaughlin told Hatewatch. 鈥淲hen I finished up in the Navy I moved back here because of that, because I鈥檝e seen how it works elsewhere, where there aren鈥檛 federal public lands like this. If anything, I鈥檓 concerned about access to those lands 鈥 I think they need to be opened up.鈥

Insofar as any movement to return federal lands to the states, McLaughlin says聽he鈥檚 completely opposed to the idea.

鈥淚 know there is a growing movement to do this, but first of all, let me say I think it鈥檚 highly unlikely,鈥 he told Hatewatch. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want one square centimeter of federal land coming to the states. We can discuss how well they are managed and how that affects state lands, but taking them over is a bad idea.鈥

So-called 鈥渃itizen militias,鈥 he says, are 鈥渋llegal,鈥 and he condemns the Bundys and their cohorts as 鈥渄omestic terrorists.鈥 He cited his previous work on terrorism task forces that included dealing with right-wing extremists聽and says he utterly rejects their antigovernment ideology: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 never what I have been about.鈥

As McLaughlin has campaigned statewide on a more regular basis, he says, he鈥檚 come into contact with a broad range of voices, and has emphasized his mainstream credentials in an attempt to distance himself from some of his earlier supporters. He says he realizes his relative political inexperience may have led him to misunderstand the motives of some of those supporters.

It鈥檚 paid off relatively well so far 鈥 he received exculpatory support in the form , as well that largely cleared him of his previous extremist associations.

However, completely escaping the Patriot orbit often proves easier said than done.

At a recent candidates鈥 event in the eastern Washington town of Loon Lake, a local activist named Ken Barker acted as McLaughlin鈥檚 fill-in at the forum. Barker, according to Hatewatch鈥檚 local sources, has a long history in the region of organizing militias, and as self-described 鈥渃onstitutional鈥 sheriff openly sympathetic to the Bundys, and an ardent subscriber to that movement鈥檚 ideology.

McLaughlin acknowledged聽in an email that he authorized Barker to speak for him, but said he had no inkling of his extremist history. 鈥淚n my association with him, he has never made any comment that would lead me to question any militia involvement. He also helped organize delivery of relief supplies in NE WA last summer (this is when I met him). I've stayed in his home and the most radical thing I had to deal with was to take off my shoes at the door.鈥

Of course, a quick review of 聽鈥撯撀爄n which he spouts endless "constitutionalist" theories about law enforcement and public lands 鈥撯撀爉ight have disabused him of that assessment. But then, antigovernment extremists have been known to disguise that side of their beliefs when drawing others into their orbit.

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