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Far-right Extremism

Paul Nehlen Is Channeling The Alt-Right To Shift The ‘Overton Window’

(Screenshot/YouTube.com)

Paul Nehlen, who is running again to unseat Speaker of the House Paul Ryan in Wisconsin, told Breitbart radio host Curt Schilling today that he is using his campaign and fiery social media presence to force discourse in the Republican Party further to the right—in his case, toward the white nationalist worldview of the alt-right.

This morning, Nehlen joined Schilling to talk about campaigning for failed Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore in Alabama and his upcoming 2018 campaign in Wisconsin.

“There’s a lot of followers out there, there’s a lot of people out there, that look up to me and I take that seriously,” Nehlen said. “But you know, people like you who are out there every day—you wake up every morning and you work hard, you get your message out, it’s imperative that you realize, ‘Hey, there’s a bunch of people out there like me, who aren’t going to give up.’ And if we’re all moving forward in the same direction, moving that Overton Window to the right, and saying, ‘Hey, this fake news media, that doesn’t work us, that doesn’t scare us’—you know, I’m standing up for people’s free speech, lawful speech.”

Over the past year, Nehlen has been working diligently, with the help of former White House strategist and Breitbart executive Steve Bannon, to shift the “Overton Window” to the extreme right. The Overton Window refers to what the public considers acceptable political discourse and policy at any given moment and how conservative or liberal politicians can be and still win elections. The Overton Window is frequently discussed by members of the alt-right, who believe their current mission, rather than directly impacting national policy, is to push the Overton Window further to the extreme right in order to sanitize white nationalist ideologies.

Earlier this year, Nehlen retweeted photos that celebrated the white supremacist Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. Nehlen was also a major proponent of “Pizzagate” conspiracy theory and told the Associated Press in August that he still believed it to be true. Earlier this month, Nehlen told columnist John Podhoretz on Twitter to “do us all a favor” and “eat a bullet.”

Last week, as first documented by the blog Angry White Men, Nehlen appeared on and praised the hosts of “Fash the Nation,” an anti-Semitic podcast popular in alt-right circles, and celebrated that “the red pills are being shot at people like with bump fire stocks.”(Taking a “red pill,” a reference to a scene in the sci-fi film “The Matrix,” is alt-right shorthand for embracing the movement’s views and bump stocks are the type of weapon modification that enabled the mass shooter in Las Vegas to achieve near-automatic fire). Nehlen also appeared on “Fash the Nation” last year, calling for an end to birthright citizenship.

Recently, Nehlen has pushed even harder to the right and dropped any attempt to conceal his affiliations with the furthest fringes of the Right. Users that view his profile on Gab, a Twitter alternative beloved by the alt-right for its almost nonexistent community guidelines, will find him sharing alt-right memes, including one that pays homage to the “It’s Okay To Be White” campaign that was devised by white nationalists who were trying demonstrate a supposed anti-white bias among liberals. Nehlen also posted a rendition of himself as a “Groyper,” the alt-right’s newest beloved cartoon frog, on Twitter.

Paul Nehlen reposts an "It's Okay to be White" meme to his Gab profile page. (Screenshot/Gab.ai)

Paul Nehlen shares a rendition of himself as a "chad nationalist," a spin-off of white nationalism. (Screenshot/Gab.ai)

Paul Nehlen shares a "Groyper" rendition of himself. (Screenshot/Twitter.com)

Nehlen’s full public embrace of his white nationalist sympathies took place as news began to spread that Speaker Ryan is considering stepping down at the end of his current term, leaving an empty seat for Nehlen to vie for. Even if Nehlen is unsuccessful, he still has potential to wreak havoc in the Wisconsin primaries and drag his fellow candidates one step closer toward the extreme Right.