McCarthy Condemns White Supremacist, Stopping
Short of Faulting Trump
The aspiring Republican House speaker disavowed the
prominent white nationalist Nick Fuentes and his ideology, but declined to
directly criticize former President Donald J. Trump for meeting with him.
“I condemn his ideology; it has no place in society at
all,” Representative Kevin McCarthy, the Republican leader, said of Nick
Fuentes.
Catie
Edmondson
By Catie
Edmondson
Nov. 29,
2022
Updated
2:30 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/29/us/politics/mccarthy-trump-nick-fuentes.html
WASHINGTON
— Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the Republican leader, on
Tuesday disavowed one of the country’s most prominent young white supremacists,
but declined to criticize former President Donald J. Trump directly for dining
with the man last week at his private club in Florida.
Mr.
McCarthy had been silent for days on Mr. Trump’s decision to have dinner with
Nick Fuentes, the racist Holocaust denier who leads the white nationalist
movement America First, and Kanye West, the artist and provocateur who has also
made antisemitic comments.
Pressed
about the dinner by reporters on Tuesday as he left a meeting at the White
House, Mr. McCarthy criticized Mr. Fuentes and comments made by Mr. West, but
stopped short of condemning Mr. Trump for meeting with them.
“I condemn
his ideology; it has no place in society at all,” Mr. McCarthy said of Mr.
Fuentes.
“The
president can have meetings with who he wants; I don’t think anybody, though,
should have a meeting with Nick Fuentes,” Mr. McCarthy said later. “And his
views shouldn’t — are nowhere within the Republican Party or within this
country itself.”
He then
falsely claimed that Mr. Trump had condemned Mr. Fuentes “four times”; the
former president has never done so. Mr. Trump has repeatedly said that he did
not know who Mr. Fuentes was, but has not denounced his views or statements,
which include unabashed racism and antisemitism.
“The
president didn’t know who he was,” Mr. McCarthy said.
Asked
whether it was appropriate for Mr. Trump to dine with Mr. West given the artist’s
antisemitic remarks, Mr. McCarthy told reporters, “I don’t think those are
right comments, and I don’t think he should have associated with them.”
Mr.
McCarthy’s comments reflected his reluctance to offer a full-throated
condemnation of members of his party who have ties to right-wing extremists,
particularly at a time when he is facing a revolt on his right flank that has
imperiled his campaign to become speaker.
It was far
from the first time Mr. McCarthy has struggled to address the extremism problem
in the Republican ranks, especially around Mr. Fuentes, who marched at the
Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017 and outside the U.S.
Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He has also warned that the nation is losing “its
white demographic core.”
In
February, after Representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Paul
Gosar of Arizona appeared at Mr. Fuentes’s annual white supremacist gathering,
Mr. McCarthy issued a rare public rebuke of the pair, calling their behavior
“appalling and wrong.”
“The party
should not be associated any time, any place with somebody who is antisemitic,”
Mr. McCarthy said at the time, calling Ms. Greene’s failure to leave the stage
after Mr. Fuentes praised Adolf Hitler “unacceptable.”
Neither Ms.
Greene nor Mr. Gosar received any punishment, and Ms. Greene has boasted that
Mr. McCarthy, whom she is supporting for speaker, will give her a powerful role
in the new Congress. Mr. Gosar had previously attended the America First
conference as its keynote speaker and wrote to the F.B.I. on his official
letterhead claiming that Mr. Fuentes had been placed on a no-fly list and
protesting the alleged action.
Asked on
Tuesday at the White House about the lawmakers in his conference with ties to
Mr. Fuentes, including Ms. Greene, Mr. McCarthy said, “She denounced him.”
Ms. Greene
has never publicly done so. Days after she spoke at Mr. Fuentes’s conference,
she told CBS News: “I do not know Nick Fuentes. I have never heard him speak. I
have never seen a video. I do not know what his views are, so I am not aligned
with anything that is controversial.”
In a later
statement, Ms. Greene said she was being attacked by “the Pharisees in the
Republican Party for being willing to break barriers and speak to a lost
generation of young people who are desperate for love and leadership.” That was
an apparent reference to an ancient group of Jewish leaders whom Jesus called
hypocrites.
Catie
Edmondson is a reporter in the Washington bureau, covering Congress. @CatieEdmondson
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