After equating neo-Nazis with anti-racist protesters and pardoning Joe Arpaio, we didn’t need any more proof of the malignant bigotry at the heart of President Trump’s agenda.
After equating neo-Nazis with anti-racist protesters and pardoning Joe Arpaio, we didn’t need any more proof of the malignant bigotry at the heart of President Trump’s agenda.
Kansas' nativist secretary of state, already occupied with Voter Fraud Commission and gubernatorial candidacy, goes all-in with alt-right publication.
There was nowhere to go from the kitchen counter.
Former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio, whose unconstitutional racial profiling tactics got him convicted of a federal crime, has been given a presidential pardon by his political ally, Donald Trump.
Sebastian Gorka, who remarkably said white supremacists shouldn’t be a terrorism concern in the United States, is no longer employed as a presidential advisor.
By pardoning Joe Arpaio, President Trump has demonstrated his contempt for the rule of law and the racism at the core of his agenda.
The White House chief of staff—retired Marine Gen. John Kelly—may have just given the most difficult directive of his career.
Marissa Blair was walking down Fourth Street when the car struck. Her fiancé, Marcus Martin, had just a split second to push her out of its path.
Joe Arpaio was so bent on pursuing his anti-immigrant crusade that he wouldn’t even allow the U.S. Constitution to stand in his way.