The Rise Of White Nationalist Hispanics

Nick Fuentes, iden­ti­fied as a “white suprema­cist” in Justice Department fil­ings, made head­lines last week for host­ing a white nation­al­ist con­fer­ence in Florida. His father is also half Mexican American.

The big pic­ture: Fuentes is part of a small but increas­ing­ly vis­i­ble num­ber of far-right provo­ca­teurs with Hispanic back­grounds who spread racist, anti­se­mit­ic messages.

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Driving the news: Cuban American Enrique Tarrio, the for­mer leader of the Proud Boys, a group the Anti-Defamation League calls an extrem­ist group with a vio­lent agen­da, was arrest­ed Tuesday and charged with con­spir­a­cy in con­nec­tion to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

What they’re say­ing: Experts tell Axios far-right extrem­ism with­in the Latino com­mu­ni­ty stems from three sources: Hispanic Americans who iden­ti­fy as white; the spread of online mis­in­for­ma­tion; and lin­ger­ing anti-Black, anti­se­mit­ic views among U.S. Latinos that are rarely open­ly discussed.