White supremacist David Duke balked at endorsing Donald Trump last year because he believed the Republican presidential candidate was too friendly with “the Jews.”
Now that Trump is the GOP front-runner, Duke has changed his tune.
“The fact is, I don’t agree with Donald Trump on Israel and other issues involving the Jews,” Duke told NBC News on Monday. “That’s why he doesn’t have my full endorsement. But just like Chris Christie, I had to make a political decision and I agree with him on a lot of other issues.”
Duke was referring to the decision by the New Jersey governor, whose presidential campaign flamed out, to endorse Trump — a move that has drawn scorn from the Republican establishment.
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“The Republicans, including Trump, are all running on issues I have supported all along like limiting immigration,” Duke said. “The party bosses don’t want to admit that. And now they’re desperate to stop Donald Trump.”
Duke also insisted he was still a political force, with hundreds of thousands of followers online “who will vote for Donald Trump.”
“Donald Trump has the potential to bring in millions of new voters who agree with our positions,” Duke added. “Based on the analytics, I would say my support is very strong.”
Longtime observers of Duke, however, said he is trying to ride the Trump bandwagon back into the good graces of those who once looked to him for leadership.
“David Duke still portrays himself as a white nationalist hero, but the fact is he hasn’t done anything political in years,” said Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center, a watchdog group that monitors racist groups. “Duke’s having a moment in the news now, and he needs this. In the white supremacist world, he’s seen as an opportunist, someone who is living off the movement.”
Marilyn Mayo of the Anti-Defamation League, which has also kept close tabs on Duke for many years, said Trump has done something Duke has been unable to do, which is “energize the white supremacist movement.”
“They don’t see Trump as a white nationalist, but he is mainstreaming some of the issues they hold dear, like keeping Mexicans and Muslims out of the country,” said Mayo. “He’s become a voice for some of their views.”
Duke, 65, first made his racist mark at Louisiana State University back in 1970 when he founded the White Youth Alliance. He became infamous for parading on campus in a Nazi uniform.
Later, Duke became a Ku Klux Klan grand wizard, and soon replaced the white sheets with business suits in a bid to make the KKK more mainstream. He reached out to women and encouraged Catholics to join. He insisted the group was “pro-white” and “pro-Christian” — not anti-black.
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In the meantime, Duke’s marriage to Chloe Hardin — with whom he had two daughters — fell apart. She went on to marry a neo-Nazi named Don Black, the founder of the racist website Stormfront.









