By Trip Gabriel Jan. 10, 2019
Update: Steve King was removed from his committee assignments over the comments made in this article.
Years before President Trump forced a government shutdown over a border wall, triggering a momentous test of wills in Washington, Representative Steve King of Iowa took to the House floor to show off a model of a 12-foot border wall he had designed.
And long before Mr. Trump demonized immigrants accusing Mexico of exporting criminals and calling for an end to birthright citizenship Mr. King turned those views into talking points, with his use of misleading data about victims of undocumented immigrants and demeaning remarks about Latinos.
Immigration is Mr. Trumps go-to issue, his surest connection to his most faithful supporters, and his prime-time address on Tuesday night underscored his willingness to use fear and misleading statements to appeal to voters just as he did with warnings about a migrant caravan before the midterm elections.
The Republican Party hadnt always intended to go this route: Officials tried for years to come up with broad-based immigration reform that would appeal to growing numbers of Latino voters. But Mr. Trumps preoccupation with the wall and anti-immigrant politics reflects how he has embraced the once-fringe views of Mr. King, who has used racist language in the past, promotes neo-Nazis on Twitter and was recently denounced by one Republican leader as a white supremacist.
With the federal government in a third week of paralysis over a border wall, Mr. Trumps positions are a reminder of how Mr. Kings ideology and his language maligning undocumented residents helped shape the Republican message in 2016 and 2018 and define Mr. Trumps agenda and prospects for re-election. Mr. King may have been ostracized by some Republicans over his racist remarks and extremist ties, but as much of the nation debates immigration, his views now carry substantial influence on the right.
Early in Mr. Trumps term, the president invited Mr. King who was long snubbed by establishment Republicans like the former House speaker John A. Boehner to the Oval Office. There, the president boasted of having raised more money for the congressmans campaigns than anyone else, including during a 2014 Iowa visit, Mr. King recalled in an interview with The Times.
Yes, Mr. President, Mr. King replied. But I market-tested your immigration policy for 14 years, and that ought to be worth something.
Mr. King, a 69-year-old former bulldozer operator with a combative manner, who has been elected nine times, helped write the book on white identity politics that are ascendant in Mr. Trumps Republican Party. That provides both a template for Mr. Trump and a warning.
Mr. Kings full-throated embrace of nativism has long found a supportive constituency in the rural Midwest, the region that was a key to Mr. Trumps 2016 victory and represents his most likely path to re-election.
But at the same time, Mr. Kings margin of victory in 2018 shrank to its narrowest in 16 years. He made national headlines for endorsing a Toronto mayoral candidate with neo-Nazi ties and for meeting with a far-right Austrian party accused of trivializing the Holocaust. On Twitter, he follows an Australian anti-Semitic activist, who proposed hanging a portrait of Hitler in every classroom. And in October, the chairman of the Republican House elections committee, Representative Steve Stivers of Ohio, condemned Mr. King, saying, We must stand up against white supremacy and hate in all forms.
Mr. King lost corporate agriculture donors like Purina, Land OLakes and Smithfield. He dropped from an 18-point lead over his Democratic opponent in his internal polls to barely squeaking out a three-point win on Election Day. On Wednesday, Mr. King drew a formidable challenger for his Fourth District seat in the 2020 Republican primary: Randy Feenstra, an assistant majority leader in the State Senate, who said Mr. King had left Iowa without a seat at the table because of sideshows and distractions.
Mr. King, in the interview, said he was not a racist. He pointed to his Twitter timeline showing him greeting Iowans of all races and religions in his Washington office. (The same office once displayed a Confederate flag on his desk.)
At the same time, he said, he supports immigrants who enter the country legally and fully assimilate because what matters more than race is the culture of America based on values brought to the United States by whites from Europe.
White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization how did that language become offensive? Mr. King said. Why did I sit in classes teaching me about the merits of our history and our civilization?
After this article was published Thursday, Mr. King issued a public statement calling himself a nationalist and defending his support of western civilizations values, and said he was not an advocate for white nationalism and white supremacy. I want to make one thing abundantly clear: I reject those labels and the evil ideology they define, he wrote. Sign Up for On Politics With Lisa Lerer
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Mr. Kings influence over national politics derives from his representation of the reddest district in the first presidential nominating state. Nearly all the 2016 Republican presidential contenders sought his blessing at a forum he hosted in Des Moines in January 2015, Mr. Trump included.
Donald Trump came to Iowa as a real nonideological candidate, Mr. King recalled. Mr. Trumps first hire in Iowa, Chuck Laudner, was a former chief of staff to Mr. King. Mr. Trumps first Iowa rally directly followed a visit to the Mexican border.
The previous year, Mr. Trump had visited to endorse Mr. Kings re-election. As the congressman warned of scenarios like Islamic State terrorists or even Africans with ebola illegally entering the country, Mr. Trump listened and nodded. When he stepped to the microphone, he echoed Mr. King.
Well, border security is a very big issue, he said. People are just flooding across.
Tom Tancredo, a former Colorado congressman who once held the most conservative views in official Washington on immigration, calling for a moratorium on even legal immigrants, said he handed the baton to Steve King when he left the House in 2008.
David Johnson, a former Republican state senator from Mr. Kings district, said he heard in the presidents rhetoric a direct echo of Mr. King. They belong to the same subset of white nationalists who are afraid of how the country is changing, he said.
Mr. King was born in Storm Lake, Iowa, and attended high school in nearby Denison, then a nearly all-white rural farming region, where his father managed a state police radio station.
After founding an earth-moving company, Mr. King ran successfully for the State Senate in 1996. His most notable legacy from six years in the Legislature was a law making English the official state language. It was a time when packinghouses and other agricultural employers had dropped wages, and Latino migrants increasingly were taking jobs that no longer attracted native-born Iowans.
Elected to Congress in 2002, Mr. King attracted the attention of hate-watch groups like the Anti-Defamation League as he spoke increasingly about preserving Western culture or Western civilization. The groups consider those buzzwords that signal support to white nationalists, along with an obsession with birthrates and abortion rates among different ethnic groups.
He uses the concepts of either culture or civilization to obfuscate that hes talking about whiteness and race, said Lawrence Rosenthal, chairman of the Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies.
In 2011, Mr. King objected to the Affordable Care Acts mandate to cover contraception. Thats not constructive to our culture and our civilization, he said in a speech in the House. If we let our birthrate get down below the replacement rate, were a dying civilization.
Mr. King seems further emboldened during the Trump presidency.
In an interview in August with a far-right web publication in Austria, Mr. King displayed a deep familiarity with racist tracts and ideas embraced by white supremacists.
He spoke of the Great Replacement, a conspiracy theory on the far right that claims shadowy elites are working behind the scenes to reduce white populations to minorities in their own countries.
Great replacement, yes, Mr. King said in the interview. These people walking into Europe by ethnic migration, 80 percent are young men.
The accusation that a great replacement of whites is underway which conspiracy theorists often link to prominent Jews like George Soros animated the torch-carrying white nationalists in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017, who chanted, You will not replace us and Jews will not replace us.
Mr. Trumps refusal to condemn the marchers, and his insistence that there were very fine people on both sides, was cheered by neo-Nazi websites.
In Mr. Kings interview with the Austrian website, he repeated his yearslong critique of multiculturalism.
What does this diversity bring that we dont already have? Mexican food. Chinese food, he said. Those things, well, thats fine, but what does it bring that we dont have that is worth the price?
In recent years, Mr. King has forged alliances with far-right European leaders, including Marine Le Pen of France and Geert Wilders of the Netherlands, one of the most anti-Muslim politicians in Europe, who calls for closing mosques.
Ahead of Dutch elections in March 2017, Mr. King endorsed Mr. Wilders in a tweet, saying, We cant restore our civilization with somebody elses babies.
Amid an ensuing controversy, he claimed the tweet wasnt about race. Virulent white supremacists, however, heard otherwise.
Steve King is basically an open white nationalist at this point, wrote Andrew Anglin, the founder of the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer.
Mr. Anglin and others celebrated that Mr. Trumps election had made once-fringe beliefs about ethnonationalism acceptable to mainstream politicians.
As Republicans have morphed from the party of George W. Bush, who sought legal status for 12 million undocumented immigrants, to the party of Mr. Trump and Mr. King, some party leaders fear for the future in a nation where Hispanic voters are a rapidly growing electorate.
Great damage has been done, said Carlos Curbelo, a moderate Republican who lost a South Florida congressional seat in the midterms. For anyone who cares about having a small-government, free-enterprise party in America that can aspire to win national elections, its a real concern.
Mr. Curbelo, who tried to forge compromise on immigration in the House last year, said Mr. Trump told him privately, including on Air Force One, that he wanted a deal with Democrats.
But the president is paralyzed by the far right, Mr. Curbelo said. Hes terrified of losing his base and the so-called conservative media.
Last week, as the new Congress was sworn in, Mr. King sat on his side of a chamber sharply delineated by demographics. The Democratic majority included record numbers of African-Americans and women, including the first Native American and the first Muslim women. Mr. Kings side was mostly people who look like him.
Wow that article is the definition of a hit piece. Everything King does is considered evil, including talking to marine Le pen who could very well become the leader in France.
And I love how he believes in the “conspiracy theory” of replacing white America, when in fact The New York Times and the left tells us every single day that white America is to be replaced and in large part this is to be done with illegal immigrants.
Steve King is the one who is “risking 2020” by running his mouth with the New York Times in a way that can easily be interpreted as an endorsement of white supremacy. He deserves what he got.