Listening to Mike Johnson and Donald Trump’s fearmongering news conference about noncitizens voting in federal elections Friday, I was reminded of the long history of anti-immigrant rhetoric in the United States.
As Paul Waldman explained for MSNBC last week, it’s already illegal — and incredibly rare — for noncitizens to vote in federal elections. The press conference appeared to me to uncomfortably echo the arguments of the white nationalist “great replacement theory,” which holds that Democrats and others are allowing minorities into the country in order to somehow win political power.
The rhetoric used by the former Republican president and the current House speaker about throngs of violent “illegals” entering the country at Democrats’ urging — and potentially casting unlawful ballots in the upcoming election — took me back to a more distant past: a century ago. Specifically, a 1926 essay on the need to protect “Americanism” from “aliens” by Hiram Evans, a dentist-turned-Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.
Evans wrote that he believed in “America for Americans,” defining the latter quite narrowly. He argued that the country’s “pioneer stock” should be kept from intermarriage with nonwhites and claimed that nonwhite immigrants did not — indeed, could not — understand the American spirit:








