"... James Tulp is a far-right talk radio host running in Mississippi’s 3rd congressional district. Like Joshua Foxworth, Tulp made an appearance on white nationalist Vincent Foxx’s YouTube show where he touted his anti-immigrant bona fides. Tulp said he was inspired to run by recent ICE raids in Mississippi and the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act.
He vowed to put an end to so-called “chain migration,” which he said is bringing in “unskilled” and “illiterate” immigrants from “Third World countries.” And he demanded to know where the right-wing equivalent of the Democrats’ “Green New Deal” was. “Where’s our ‘Green New Deal’? Where’s our end to birthright citizenship plan?” he asked.
Birthright citizenship is guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, but Tulp wants to “introduce legislation” to end it. He also stated on Twitter that he wants to “declare English our national language to foster national cohesion and identity,” and vowed he would “sign on as cosponsor to English Language Unity Act day 1!” He tagged the organization ProEnglish in a follow-up tweet.
ProEnglish, an anti-immigrant hate group founded by the late white nationalist John Tanton, responded by promoting Tulp’s campaign in a short bulletin. “Mississippi congressional candidate James Tulp is running for office in Mississippi District 3, and he has posted his support for official English on his campaign website,” it read.
Archived here.
Tulp has demonized immigrants as “[p]easants from the third world” who will “always work for less than American citizens.” And he’s promoted the “great replacement” theory, writing that, “None of the debates we’re having on guns, abortion, free speech, or capitalism will matter if the population is replaced with third-worlders who will vote Dem 80% of the time.” On December 31st, 2019, he declared his support for militarizing the southern border. “Raise your hand if you want to move our troops from the Middle East to the Southern Border,” he tweeted.
Tulp also wants to crack down on abortion and pornography — which Fuentes, Fox, and their supporters militantly oppose.
After the Supreme Court left in place a Kentucky law mandating invasive transvaginal ultrasounds prior to an abortion, Tulp crowed that it was “Great news!” On December 6th, 2019, he tweeted, “I don’t recall ever coming across the right to murder babies [in the Constitution].” Three days later he pledged to request that the DOJ “enforce obscenity laws to stop the explosion of pornography.”
While Tulp has said advocating for restrictionist policies on legal immigration “does not make you a ‘white nationalist’ or ‘holocaust denier,'” he promotes people who fit into those categories. For example, Tulp said Vincent Foxx “is doing a great job highlighting America First candidates across the country.”
He also follows a slew of white nationalist and far-right accounts, including VDARE, Vincent Foxx, ProEnglish, Jaden McNeil, Charles Murray, Stefan Molyneux, Nick Fuentes, the Center for Immigration Studies, NumbersUSA, J. Owen Shroyer, Mark Dice, Lauren Southern, The Columbia Bugle, Mike Cernovich, and Faith Goldy. ..."