Hello, it's the weekend. This is The Weekender ☕
One of former President Trump's favorite far-right activists, Laura Loomer, essentially posed an interesting question when I spoke to her earlier this week: Who among us hasn't accidentally published and shared content that indicated they were fundraising with one of America's most notorious neo-Nazis?
I ended up on the phone with Loomer after noticing that an online fundraising campaign for her new anti-immigration documentary project indicated that donations were being received by a group led by notorious Zoomer neo-Nazi Nick Fuentes. Checking into the connection provoked a round of far right finger pointing, infighting, and paranoia.
Loomer insisted the page, which she had shared on at least five occasions, listed the "America First Foundation," Fuentes' group, because of a "typo." She said the money was actually going to her production company, "Truth + Light Media." Along with passing the buck, Loomer cast the reporting as part of a nefarious plot on the part of TPM, which she called a "Soros-funded publication."
(Of course, TPM is not funded by the billionaire financier and far right bete noir. We receive over ninety percent of our funding from our readers and are actually in the middle of a membership drive. It would be awesome if you would sign up or support our journalism fund since, despite Loomer's claims, our Soros checks are not actually coming.)
When we reached "Truth + Light Media" CEO Edward Szall, he suggested the apparent association with Fuentes, whose foundation was scrubbed from the donation page, stemmed from an error with the Christian fundraising platform GiveSendGo, which was hosting the campaign. Szall also theorized that TPM was part of some kind of unspecified conspiracy. At the end of this weird rabbit hole, GiveSendGo co-founder Heather Wilson pointed her finger back at Szall and Loomer. According to Wilson, the documentarians likely ended up in an "accidental autofill situation." Of course, no one ends up with an autofill result if it's not something they have already typed out.
So why does the saga of this supposed 24 character typo matter? On one level, it doesn't. Both Szall and Loomer have plenty of fringe connections and views. Even if we buy their insistence that Fuentes has no involvement with the project, the whole thing is clearly extreme. The documentary in question, "The Great Replacement," is focused on the titular conspiracy theory which posits that a shadowy network of (often Jewish) global elites are responsible for deliberately driving immigration to systematically replace white Americans and eradicate their culture. It's feverish, frenzied stuff and it has been cited in the manifestos of multiple mass shooters — and that's why all of this is important. As extreme and dangerous as this all is, it hasn't stopped Loomer from being repeatedly embraced by former President Donald Trump and Republican voters.
Along with describing Loomer's efforts to distance her latest venture from Fuentes, our story digs into her links to others on the far right and her associations with more established figures in the GOP including Trump. The whole episode is yet another example of how, in the Trump era, Republican politics and the furthest edges of the right wing are becoming indistinguishable. As one Trump ally put it to us, fringe players like Loomer aren't necessarily the ones driving the extreme immigration agenda.
"Have you not been watching Trump? Trump led the charges," the Trump ally said. "She's following him. He's not following her."
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