January 17, 2026

Ken Cuccinelli Cites Right-Wing Activists to Justify Authoritarian Violence

072220-01-Ken-Cuccinelli-Police
Ken Cuccinelli Cites Right-Wing Activists to Justify Authoritarian Violence

Ken Cuccinelli Cites Right-Wing Activists to Justify Authoritarian Violence
Win McNamee / Getty Images

Right-wing activists and politicians have tried to blame mass civil unrest on their favorite bogeyman: anti-fascist activists.


Ken Cuccinelli Cites Right-Wing Activists to Justify Authoritarian Violence

By Jared Holt


Acting โ€‹Deputy Homeland Security Secretaryโ€‹ Ken Cuccinelli helps coordinate the federal law enforcement agentsโ€‹ unleashing a wave of authoritarian violence against โ€‹anti-racism protesters in Portland, Oregon, โ€‹and has been justifying his departmentโ€™s actions by citing pundits and personalities notorious for their connections to far-right movements.

โ€‹Since 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 enforcementโ€™s use of force against protesters in โ€‹cities led by Democrats. Those sources, which include Andy Ngo, Breitbart News, and reporters from The Daily Caller, โ€‹have โ€‹also sought to smear journalists reportโ€‹ing facts that contradict their hyperโ€‹partisanโ€‹ misinformation by claiming that those reporters are sympathetic to anti-fascistsโ€‹ and therefore โ€‹aligned with domestic radicals.

Among Cuccinelliโ€™s favorite sources to justify actions against protesters is โ€‹new media star Ngo, who BuzzFeed News reporter Joe Bernstein noted last year rose to fame by building โ€œan incendiary political narrative out of a narrow selection of facts.โ€ Bernstein wrote of Ngo, โ€œHe 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 Ngoโ€™s relationships to far-right agitatorsโ€‹, which had been exposed in a Portland Mercury investigation and may have led to Ngoโ€™s departure from Quilletteโ€‹. โ€‹Writer Hannah Gais highlighted instances where Ngo had minimized the radical elements of the subjects he portrayed as victimsโ€‹ at the hands of anti-fascists โ€œin favor of a straightforward victimization narrative.โ€ Gais wroteโ€‹, โ€‹โ€In other words, this is all a cynical and dangerous grift. In the service of this grift, brushing shoulders with the far rightโ€”or even embracing themโ€”is fine, so long as plausible deniability is retained.โ€‹โ€

Cuccinelli has cited Ngoโ€™s content at least seven times on his official government Twitter account since โ€‹mass protests began in late May following the police killing of โ€‹Floyd, โ€‹a number of which tried to scapegoat ant-fascist activists. In one tweet citing Ngoโ€™s content, Cuccinelli tagged Michelle Malkin, who in the last year has rebranded herself as the โ€œmommyโ€ of the โ€œgroyperโ€ white nationalist youth coalition, appeared on radio shows hosted by racist extremists, promoted anti-Semitic and racist literature, and headlined a white nationalist conference โ€‹for interested attendees of the 2019 Conservative Political Action Conference.

Ken Cuccinelli Cites Right-Wing Activists to Justify Authoritarian Violence

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 โ€œalt-rightโ€ white nationalistโ€‹s into mainstream conservative discourse. Cuccinelli has also shared information from hyperโ€‹partisan 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 โ€œinvadedโ€ by immigrants โ€œone 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 โ€œdirectly 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 โ€œmisconductโ€ for an โ€œinability or refusal to speak English at the workplaceโ€ and disqualify them from receiving unemployment benefits. Last year, The Atlantic described Cuccinelli as โ€œThe New Stephen Miller,โ€ referring to the far-right White House official at the forefront of the Trump administrationโ€™s 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.