James Lubinskas, recently hired as director of communications for the controversial English-only group U.S. English, left the group after ties to hate groups were exposed.
James Lubinskas, recently hired as director of communications for the controversial English-only group U.S. English, left the group after ties to hate groups were exposed.
An array of right-wing foundations and think tanks support efforts to make bigoted and discredited ideas respectable.
The Year in Hate, 2002: hate takes a hit as deaths, defections, arrests and internal splits roil America's embattled white supremacist movement.
A rift between racist skinheads and the 'elitist' National Alliance is weakening the nation's leading hate group.
Seven years after moving to the United States, a key British neofascist has been deported. Mark Cotterill, who spent much of his time in America trying to unite factions of the radical right, flew back to England.
Moderate members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans defeated the candidacy of an infamous white supremacist lawyer in August. But extremists managed to take over most of the 106-year-old "heritage" organization anyway.
Briton Mark Cotterill, founder of the American Friends of the British National Party, has been allowed to retroactively legalize his neofascist organization.
Environmental radicals and animal rights activists say it's "ludicrous" for the FBI to call them the No. 1 domestic terror threat. But their rhetoric and increasingly extreme criminal actions are making the "eco-terror" label stick.
Pat Buchanan's presidential bid in 2000 dashed the Reform Party, once a significant third political force, into pieces. Now, white supremacists, Christian "Patriots" and other right-wing extremists are scrambling to pick up the fragments.
The unexpected death of National Alliance leader William Pierce shifted the neo-Nazi landscape, but the appointment of Erich Gliebe as Pierce's successor means the organization lives on.