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Former Newsmax Host Speaks at White Nationalist Conference

Former Newsmax host and longtime conservative pundit Michelle Malkin spoke alongside a former Klan lawyer and several prominent white nationalist propagandists at a three-day conference in Tennessee in mid-November, Hatewatch has learned.

Malkin, who most recently hosted the show 鈥淪overeign Nation鈥 on Newsmax TV, was one of nearly a dozen speakers at American Renaissance鈥檚 annual gathering from Nov. 12-14. The think tank 鈥 which bills itself as a 鈥渞ace-realist, white advocacy organization鈥 鈥 holds the event each fall in a state park about 35 miles from downtown Nashville, Tennessee. Throughout the years, Jared Taylor, the organization鈥檚 longtime head, has invited an array of neo-Nazis, white nationalists, Klansmen and other prominent figures in the American and global racist right.

Michelle Malkin
Fox News commentator and author Michelle Malkin participates in the American Conservative Union's 2016 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Oxon Hill, Maryland. (Photo by Gage Skidmore/Alamy)

Among the event鈥檚 featured speakers this year were Sam Dickson, a former lawyer for the Klan聽who has said 鈥渄esegregation was a mistake鈥; Kevin DeAnna, an American Renaissance and VDARE staffer who writes under the pseudonyms 鈥淕regory Hood鈥 and 鈥淛ames Kirkpatrick鈥; and F. Roger Devlin, a white nationalist writer who 聽that Norwegian women鈥檚 鈥渓izard brains鈥 were causing them to fall for Pakistani men.

In her speech, Malkin extolled those far-right extremist activists involved in 鈥渉and to hand, pen to pen combat against the vast anti-white, anti-American forces bent on demographic mass murder,鈥 according to 聽from an anonymous American Renaissance contributor. Later, the blog post noted, she compared herself to the white nationalists in the room, claiming that 鈥渙ne way or another, they 鈥 we 鈥 have arrived at the same shared destination point.鈥

While Malkin鈥檚 Nov. 13 address was her first appearance at an American Renaissance event, the site began publishing her columns on their website on Jan. 11, 2020. Since then, the site has shared 40 of her syndicated columns, which are distributed to print and digital outlets by the California-based Creators Syndicate, according to Hatewatch鈥檚 review of American Renaissance鈥檚 archives.

Hatewatch reached out by email to Malkin and American Renaissance for comment about the gathering. Hatewatch also reached out to Brian Peterson, Newsmax鈥檚 senior vice president of communications and marketing, regarding Malkin鈥檚 recent association with the network. They did not respond.

Malkin鈥檚 longstanding ties to the racist right

As the founder of two popular conservative digital media outlets and author of a handful of books trumpeting draconian anti-immigration policies and rhetoric, Malkin has provided a bridge between the nativist fringe and the more mainstream right wing for nearly two decades. White nationalists and anti-immigrant groups alike have lauded her work as instrumental to their causes. These include the Trump-tied Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank headed by Mark Krikorian that on U.S. immigration policy in a 2016 press release, as well as former 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 attendee Nick Fuentes, who has called her a 鈥渃hampion鈥 and 鈥渕ommy.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛 apologize as somebody who has non-white skin for defending the idea that America should maintain its historic demographic balance,鈥 Malkin told Lana Lokteff during an appearance on Red Ice TV聽in April 2020. Here, she refers to the belief popular among nativists and members of the white power movement that America鈥檚 white majority ought to be maintained, and does so while citing her identity as a person of color. Though Malkin has, at times, leaned on her identity as a Filipino-American to deflect criticisms of her affiliation with members of the racist far right, the inclusion of people of color in far-right groups can provide these groups with a semblance of plausible deniability for their extreme views, as Daniel Martinez Hosang and Joseph E. Lowndes argued in their 2019 book, Producers, Parasites, and Patriots.

Recently, some mainstream conservative organizations have chosen to distance themselves from Malkin because of her fraternization with certain members of the extreme right, such as Fuentes. Still, her associations with the white nationalist fringe 鈥 in particular, Peter Brimelow鈥檚 VDARE 鈥 date back to the early 2000s.

Brimelow began running Malkin鈥檚 syndicated columns on his website in 2002. Since then, VDARE has published more than 1,370 of her articles. As early as 2004, Malkin described Brimelow, a self-described 鈥渞acial nationalist,鈥 as a 鈥渇riend.鈥 She has assisted in fundraising drives for the site as well. In , Malkin described Brimelow as a thinker who had 鈥済reatly influenced鈥 her work since the mid-1990s and stated that she was 鈥渇orever indebted to him.鈥

In the same appeal, Malkin called a handful of other VDARE contributors 鈥渋ndispensable,鈥 including Kevin DeAnna, whom Hatewatch revealed in 2019聽to be a VDARE and American Renaissance staffer who writes for those sites under the pseudonyms 鈥淛ames Kirkpatrick鈥 and 鈥淕regory Hood,鈥 and Marcus Epstein, a Virginia-based lawyer and former GOP operative who, according to materials reviewed by Hatewatch, has written for the site under the name 鈥淲ashington Watcher鈥 since 2009. In emails and chats from former Breitbart editor Katie McHugh, Epstein and other extremists appeared to tie him to the 鈥淲ashington Watcher鈥 pseudonym. (McHugh, once a part of this world, has since denounced聽her ties to white nationalism.) McHugh verified to Hatewatch in a text-message exchange that she and others within her circle were aware that Epstein wrote for VDARE under that name. She added that DeAnna, her boyfriend at the time, frequently referred to Epstein and 鈥淲ashington Watcher鈥 interchangeably. Epstein did not respond to Hatewatch鈥檚 request for comment via email.

As Hatewatch previously reported, Epstein pleaded guilty to assaulting a Black woman in Washington, D.C., in 2009. Since the mid-2000s, Epstein has organized a handful of events where Taylor was invited either as speaker or participant. In 2006, he sponsored a debate between Taylor, then-National Review contributing editor John Derbyshire, and conservative Black activist Kevin Martin. In the run-up to Trump鈥檚 election in 2016, Epstein invited Taylor to at least one event in his D.C. area discussion club series, 鈥淎lt Right Toastmasters,鈥 which featured a variety of prominent white nationalist speakers.

On Nov. 27, VDARE announced Malkin would join Brimelow, longtime contributor John Derbyshire, and DeAnna, albeit under his 鈥淛ames Kirkpatrick鈥 moniker, for an online fundraiser on Giving Tuesday. However, according to Hatewatch鈥檚 review of later promotional material and VDARE鈥檚 Giving Tuesday livestream, Malkin appears to have dropped out of the event last minute.

Media outlet tied to racist fight club joined Malkin at conference

Members of a media organization tied to a racist, far-right lifestyle brand joined Malkin and others at the conference, Hatewatch found.

On Sunday, Nov. 14, Daryle Lamont Jenkins of One People鈥檚 Project 聽depicting three men, two of whom were associated with the self-described nationalist media outlet Media2Rise. Robert Rundo, the former head of the racist street-fighting club Rise Above Movement, founded Media2Rise in 2020 to provide positive coverage to white power groups, both in the U.S. and abroad. In the video, three men 鈥 a Media2Rise correspondent who identified himself as Lucca Corgiat; Graham Whitson, the group鈥檚 videographer; and an unknown man wearing a mask and sunglasses 鈥 approached Jenkins and antifascist activists asking for comment. When Jenkins asked Corgiat if Rundo was at the event, the correspondent for the white nationalist network responded, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 answer that,鈥 as the masked man and Whitson, who was recording the encounter, looked on.

Both Rundo, who is presumed to be based in Europe, and Whitson have recently faced legal challenges for their respective roles in the white power movement. Federal authorities charged Rundo and other members of the Rise Above Movement with rioting in June 2017 in connection to a demonstration that March in Berkeley, California, that descended into violence. While a district judge dismissed the charges in 2019, a court of appeals reversed that decision and reinstated the charges this March.

聽Whitson in August 2020, alongside Patriot Front leader Thomas Rousseau. Whitson and Rousseau face charges of criminal mischief in connection to the pair allegedly placing stickers promoting Rousseau鈥檚 group on local government property.

Though Media2Rise has produced documentaries profiling white supremacist groups in the past, it is unclear what, if any, footage of the conference the organization intends to release.

Photo illustration by 人兽性交 (L-R: Kevin DeAnna by Jeff Malet, Michelle Malkin, Sam Dickson)

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