Amid one of the most racially-charged presidential campaigns in recent memory, Investigation Discovery is debuting a new documentary series looking at the Southern Poverty Law Center‘s efforts to fight violent hate crimes across the country.
“Hate in America,” which debuts Feb. 29, digs into the case files of SPLC to look at racially and ethnically-motivated criminals and supremacist groups that not only remain active today, but according to new data, are growing in number in the wake of Barack Obama’s election in 2008 as the first black president. The timing of the series couldn’t be better as far as Heidi Beirich, the head of SPLC’s Intelligence Project, is concerned.
“Given the vitriol in the presidential campaign and Donald Trump’s front-runner status, it reminds us that this kind of hate can be right in the mainstream,” she told MSNBC on Thursday. “White supremacists love Donald Trump … and they are mobilizing politically.”
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White supremacists have been uncharacteristically active in the 2016 GOP primaries. Although unaffiliated with Trump’s campaign, hate groups have recorded robocalls on his behalf. Most recently, people in Ku Klux Klan costumes carrying pro-Trump signs were photographed at the Nevada GOP caucuses. Trump himself has twice retweeted an apparent white supremacist, and his campaign has yet to publicly disavow supporters who spout hateful rhetoric. Meanwhile, earlier in this election cycle, Trump’s rivals Sens. Ted Cruz, Rick Santorum and Rand Paul rejected thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from Earl Holt III, the president of Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist group.
Beirich believes that the failure of much of the mainstream Republican establishment to purge hatemongers in their midst speaks to the importance of the “Hate in America” series, but also the challenging climate for organizations like hers. Ten years ago, when GOPer George Allen had his infamous “macaca” gaffe, it derailed his campaign and national Republicans distanced themselves from him. But Beirich calls the relative silence of RNC chairman Reince Priebus and other party leaders on Trump’s racially-charged language and policies “unheard of in modern politics.”
“There is a real constituency is this country this is not comfortable with changing demographics,” she said, citing widely reported exit polling data out of South Carolina from the left-leaning Public Policy Polling which showed that an overwhelming majority of Trump voters (70 percent) still support the Confederate flag and a surprising number (31 percent) who allegedly don’t disagree with the notion that white people represent a superior race. When the New York Times analyzed YouGov data, it determined that “nearly 20 percent of Mr. Trump’s voters disagreed with Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation,” the executive order that freed Southern slaves during the Civil War.
And on Thursday, KKK veteran and white nationalist David Duke urged listeners of his radio program to vote for Trump. “Voting for these people, voting against Donald Trump at this point is really treason to your heritage,” Duke said regarding the candidacies of Cruz and Rubio, who are both Cuban Americans.









