Anti-Muslim conspiracy theorist Frank Gaffney has received more media attention than usual this week after his “think tank,” Center for Security Policy (CSP), was cited in Donald Trump’s call to ban Muslims from entering the United States. Gaffney organized a virtual press briefing Tuesday to elaborate on his conspiracy theory level claims that Muslims are quietly subverting government institutions via immigration as part of what he calls “civilization jihad.”
“So whatever one think about Donald Trump’s policies, suggestions, about how to contend with the effort to stop more jihadists from coming here, it does seem to us this is a time for a serious adult conversation about how best to prevent that from happening,” Gaffney said during the briefing. (The briefing, while initially available to view on YouTube, has since been made private.)
Gaffney then introduced Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) Executive Director Mark Krikorian, who joined via telephone. Earlier Tuesday, Krikorian wrote an article for National Review Online with a headline Gaffney seemed to be inspired by: “It’s Time for a Grown-Up Alternative to Trump’s Crude Muslim-Immigration Proposal.”
So, what “grown-up alternative” does Krikorian have to offer?
A restoration of the Cold War-era principle of “ideological exclusion” so broadly defined it would likely result in Trump-esque bans for Muslims regardless. Quite telling from a man who has, among other things, claimed refugees are “extinguishing” Europeans’ national existence and that freedom of religion is “not a Muslim value.”
“Of course people could, and would, lie,” Krikorian writes in his article, “but the very fact that such a question is asked would send a message about what we expect of people hoping to live among us.”
Krikorian reiterated many of the points laid out in his article during his press briefing remarks. He continued to dismiss Trump’s plan as unworkable while simultaneously advocating policy goals that are virtually identical.
Such behavior should be expected from Krikorian who previously praised the mass deportation plan Trump released during the summer because, in his words, “it does clearly advance the immigration debate.” On his radio program in August, Frank Gaffney similarly approved, saying he was struck “by how basically sensible many of the things, if not all of the things” in the plan were.
Imagine 2050’s pages have often noted that Gaffney and Krikorian are close colleagues. This should be expected given the extreme nature of their respective organizations and shared nativist agenda. What is troubling is the legitimacy their work is given by elected officials.
Just last month, Krikorian testified before a congressional subcommittee on refugee policy. Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX), the former chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, began his remarks praising Krikorian. “First of all, I’d like to single out Mr. Krikorian and thank him for his excellent testimony. I honestly don’t know how anyone could disagree with one word,” Smith said.
Krikorian, Gaffney, and many others within the organized nativist movement coordinate messaging through the far-right strategy group Groundswell, exposed by Mother Jones in 2013. To members of Groundswell and the nativist movement, Trump’s campaign has been almost too good to be true. Trump’s bigoted and outlandish comments being frequently reported and commented on raises the salience of their nativist policy and now they can appear to be the moderate, “grown-up” alternative to Trump’s bombast.
Krikorian and Gaffney, though, are anything but an alternative. “Grown-up” bigotry is still bigotry.