The strangest presidential campaign is getting even stranger.
The strangest presidential campaign is getting even stranger.
Last night, The Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump campaign hired Stephen Bannon, the executive chairman of Breitbart News LLC, as its chief executive – a move that brings the campaign even closer to the nebulous Alt-Right movement.
The GOP presidential nominee steadfastly denies that he's encouraging violence and racism around his campaign, but the results speak otherwise.
Most of those who follow extremism and extremist candidates in the political mainstream are focused tightly on the presidential bid of Donald Trump. But there are a number of other races featuring unusual candidates around the country.
A prominent radical racist discusses recent street violence, the GOP convention and the future of white nationalism.
The Bundys of Nevada orchestrated two armed standoffs with the government. After almost two years, they finally face justice.
A movement made up of sheriffs claiming to be the highest law enforcement authority in the country is growing nationwide as it exploits hot-button issues such as gun control to encourage sheriffs to defy federal laws they don’t like, according to the Summer 2016 issue of the SPLC’s Intelligence Report, released today.
A congressional candidate in eastern Tennessee who recently made national headlines for his “Make America White Again” billboards is hoping Donald Trump’s racially charged presidential campaign will increase his chances of winning.
After weeks of rumors, David Duke, the former leader of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, has formally announced his bid for U.S. Senate in his home state of Louisiana on the last day for qualifying for the race.