

By Jared Holt
Acting โDeputy Homeland Security Secretaryโ Ken Cuccinelli helps coordinate the federal law enforcement agentsโ unleashing a wave of authoritarian violence against โanti-racism protesters in Portland, Oregon, โand has been justifying his departmentโs actions by citing pundits and personalities notorious for their connections to far-right movements.
โSince the police killing of George Floyd, right-wing activists and politicians, including President Donald Trump who sent the federal agents, have tried to blame mass civil unrest on their favorite boogeyman: anti-fascist activists. The right-wing figures and outlets Cuccinelli has cited on his official Twitter account, @HomelandKen, have well-documented histories of stretching facts to portray anti-fascist activists as an imminent terrorist threat and to justify law enforcementโs use of force against protesters in โcities led by Democrats. Those sources, which include Andy Ngo, Breitbart News, and reporters from The Daily Caller, โhave โalso sought to smear journalists reportโing facts that contradict their hyperโpartisanโ misinformation by claiming that those reporters are sympathetic to anti-fascistsโ and therefore โaligned with domestic radicals.
Among Cuccinelliโs favorite sources to justify actions against protesters is โnew media star Ngo, who BuzzFeed News reporter Joe Bernstein noted last year rose to fame by building โan incendiary political narrative out of a narrow selection of facts.โ Bernstein wrote of Ngo, โHe proceeds from a worldview and seeks to confirm it, without asking to what degree his coverage becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.โ
Jewish Currents published a lengthy profile last year that examined Ngoโs relationships to far-right agitatorsโ, which had been exposed in a Portland Mercury investigation and may have led to Ngoโs departure from Quilletteโ. โWriter Hannah Gais highlighted instances where Ngo had minimized the radical elements of the subjects he portrayed as victimsโ at the hands of anti-fascists โin favor of a straightforward victimization narrative.โ Gais wroteโ, โโIn other words, this is all a cynical and dangerous grift. In the service of this grift, brushing shoulders with the far rightโor even embracing themโis fine, so long as plausible deniability is retained.โโ
Cuccinelli has cited Ngoโs content at least seven times on his official government Twitter account since โmass protests began in late May following the police killing of โFloyd, โa number of which tried to scapegoat ant-fascist activists. In one tweet citing Ngoโs content, Cuccinelli tagged Michelle Malkin, who in the last year has rebranded herself as the โmommyโ of the โgroyperโ white nationalist youth coalition, appeared on radio shows hosted by racist extremists, promoted anti-Semitic and racist literature, and headlined a white nationalist conference โfor interested attendees of the 2019 Conservative Political Action Conference.

The acting DHS leader has also supported his claims by sharing links to Breitbart News, an outlet that spent much of the 2016 electionโ promoting โalt-rightโ white nationalistโs into mainstream conservative discourse. Cuccinelli has also shared information from hyperโpartisan sites including The Federalist and RedState โ(known for sharing revenge porn of an elected official), from pro-Trump mouthpieces like Sean Hannity and Buck Sexton, and from staffers at The Daily Caller.
Cuccinelliโ, who was the GOP nominee for governor in 2013, has a sordid history of expressing his own far-right beliefs. In 2015, Cuccinelli told radio host Steve Deace that the United States was being โinvadedโ by immigrants โone person at a time.โ He used similar rhetoric to describe undocumented immigrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, writing in a 2014 Facebook post that the country was being โdirectly invadedโ by those immigrants. For more than a decade, Cuccinelli has made clear his support for far-right causes and his loathing for immigrantsโ through his rhetoric and proposed legislation, which included a bill to charge employees with โmisconductโ for an โinability or refusal to speak English at the workplaceโ and disqualify them from receiving unemployment benefits. Last year, The Atlantic described Cuccinelli as โThe New Stephen Miller,โ referring to the far-right White House official at the forefront of the Trump administrationโs draconian immigration policiesโ.
Originally published by Right Wing Watch, 07.21.2020, a project of People for the American Way, a program of Open Society Foundations, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.
