March 28, 2024

Rep. Steve King Quotes White Supremacist Comparing ‘Leftists’ to Nazis


Congressman Steve King of Iowa speaking at the 2013 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland. (Photo: Gage Skidmore via Flickr Commons)


Rep. Steve King of Iowa promoted a white supremacist on his Twitter account—again.


By Jared Holt / 09.12.2018


Rep. Steve King of Iowa promoted a white supremacist on his Twitter account—again.

King wrote that the word “Nazi” is “injected into Leftist talking points because the worn out [and] exhausted ‘racist’ is over used [and] applied to everyone who lacks melanin [and] who fail to virtue signal at the requisite frequency [and] decibels. But…Nazis were socialists [and] Leftists are socialists.” He posted the same message on September 9.

When King posted this message today, he did so while quote-tweeting Lana Lokteff, who we identified last year as one of the major voices spreading white supremacist hate on YouTube on behalf of the web-based outlet Red Ice. Lokteff once invited alt-right YouTuber Faith Goldy onto the network to defend the world-famous “14 Words” white supremacist slogan.

Lokteff recently declared that American “can never, ever, ever, be too white” and has asserted that interracial dating is “more devious than blatant in-your-face mass murdering.” She is an unabashed “ethno-nationalist,” meaning that she advocates for immigration policies that would enforce a white supermajority in America. Lokteff has boasted that women helped elect both President Trump and Adolf Hitler.

This isn’t the first time that King has shared messages from unabashed white supremacists. In June, King promoted Mark Collett, a well-established British neo-Nazi. Additionally, King has a reputation for professing white-nationalist rhetoric about undocumented immigrants, once comparing them to livestock, and racial demographics in America, claiming “we can’t restore our civilization with somebody else’s babies.”

And despite all of this, as HuffPost reports, the Republican Party apparently chooses not to care.


Originally published by Right Wing Watch, 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.