Donald Trump’s new pledge to ban all Muslims from entering the country – even, apparently, American citizens – marked a shocking turn in the GOP primaries on Monday, but it didn’t come from out of nowhere.
Rather, Trump’s call for religion-based discrimination is just the latest example of a fringe, anti-Muslim movement Republican leaders have spent years working to contain, only to see it bubble into the national conversation through this primary’s outsider candidates.
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In this case, Trump made the connection clear as day. His proposal to ban Muslim entry into the U.S. cited research from the Center for Security Policy, an organization led by conservative gadfly Frank Gaffney that’s been labeled extremist by the Southern Poverty Law Center and has repeatedly clashed with other conservatives over its views.
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Gaffney is a longtime conservative activist, more recently known for his leading role in the anti-Sharia movement, which warns of a Muslim plot to impose radical fundamentalist law along the lines of Saudi Arabia. The movement is notorious for seeing Islamic conspirators behind every tree, and Gaffney was banned in 2011 from the Conservative Political Action Conference, the right’s biggest activist showcase, after accusing its organizers of secretly plotting with the Muslim Brotherhood.
While Gaffney has been too hot for many Republicans to touch, Dr. Ben Carson and Trump both attended a summit with him this year along with Sen. Ted Cruz, former Sen. Rick Santorum, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.
Carson’s opposition this year to a hypothetical Muslim president has roots in Gaffney’s brand of anti-Islamic activism as well. As part of his argument, Carson warned that even outwardly assimilated Muslim-Americans should be viewed with suspicion because radicals follow a religious edict known as “taqiyya” to conceal their true motives. Religious scholars say it’s a misinterpretation of the concept, which has traditionally been used in Shia Islam to hide one’s faith from persecutors in times of danger, but Gaffney has cited it to tar all Muslims as suspect, as have far right nationalist leaders in Europe.
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This isn’t the first election the movement has crossed into GOP politics, either. Republican lawmakers frequently fielded Sharia-related questions from constituents during the last election cycle, even as prominent leaders took care at key points to distance themselves from Gaffney and his ilk.
In 2012, then-Speaker John Boehner joined figures like Sen. John McCain and Sen. Marco Rubio to condemn a wild conspiracy theory spread by Gaffney and advocated by tea party lawmakers that then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s aide Huma Abedin was part of a sweeping plot by radical Islamists to infiltrate the government.
“These are dangerous accusations,” Boehner said at the time.








