By Tom Nichols
Monday, February 23, 2026
Over the past few months, during his agency’s chaotic
crackdowns in Chicago and Minneapolis, the U.S. Border Patrol chief Greg Bovino
has worn an unusual uniform: a wide-lapel greatcoat with brass buttons and
stars along one sleeve. It looks like it was taken right off the shoulders of a
Wehrmacht officer in the 1930s. Bovino’s choice of garment is more than
tough-guy cosplay (German media noted the aesthetic immediately). The coat
symbolizes a trend: The Republicans, it seems, have a bit of a Nazi problem.
By this, I mean that some Republicans are deploying Nazi
imagery and rhetoric, and espouse ideas associated with the Nazi Party during
its rise to power in the early 1930s. A few recent examples: An ICE lawyer
linked to a white-supremacist social-media account that praised Hitler was
apparently allowed
to return to federal court. Members of the national Young Republicans
organization were caught in a group chat laughing
about their love for Hitler. Vice President J. D. Vance shrugged off that
controversy, instead of condemning the growing influence of anti-Semites in his
party. (In December, at Turning Point USA’s conference, Vance said, “I didn’t
bring a list of conservatives to denounce or to deplatform.”)
Even federal agencies are modeling
Nazi phrasing. The Department of Homeland Security used an anthem beloved
by neo-Nazi groups, “By God We’ll Have Our Home Again,” in a recruitment ad.
The Labor Department hung a giant banner of Donald Trump’s face from its
headquarters, as if Washington were Berlin in 1936, and posted expressions on
social media such as “America is for Americans”—an obvious riff on the Nazi
slogan “Germany for the Germans”—and “Americanism Will Prevail,” in a font
reminiscent of Third Reich documents.
Trump, of course, openly pines to be a dictator. In his
first term, he reportedly told his chief of staff, General John Kelly, that he wished
he had generals who were as loyal as Hitler’s military leaders. (The
president was perhaps unaware of how often the führer’s officers tried to kill
him.) More recently, the White House’s official X account supported Trump’s
pursuit of Greenland by posting a meme with the caption “Which way, Greenland
man?” That is not merely a clunky turn of phrase; it’s an echo of Which Way
Western Man?, the title of a 1978 book by the American neo-Nazi William
Gayley Simpson, a former Presbyterian minister who called for America to expel
its Jewish citizens.
The people pushing such trash are offended by the
accusation that they are pantomiming Nazis. “Calling everything you dislike
‘Nazi propaganda’ is tiresome,” a DHS spokesperson told Politico. But
when even Laura Loomer—conspiracy theorist and ardent Trump supporter—says on
social media that “the GOP has a Nazi problem,” then perhaps the GOP has a
Nazi problem.
***
As a former Republican, I’m aware that the American
conservative movement has spent generations fighting off intrusions from the
far right, including the John Birchers and the Ku Klux Klan. But I am still
surprised and aggrieved by how quickly 21st-century Nazism has found a home in
the party of Lincoln. In 1991, President George H. W. Bush repudiated the
former Klan leader David Duke, who was running as a Republican to be
Louisiana’s governor. Today, Trump and his party haven’t bothered to even
pretend to be appalled by the degenerates gathering under the GOP aegis.
So how did a major American political party become a safe
space for such people?
When I first joined the GOP, in 1979, the party around me
did not seem hospitable to Nazis. A liberal Black Republican, Edward Brooke,
had just finished two terms as our junior senator from Massachusetts; the
liberal Republicans Lowell Weicker and John Chafee represented Connecticut and
Rhode Island, respectively. In college, I worked in the Massachusetts state
House for our hometown representative, a young and principled working-class
Democrat (my GOP membership was not a disqualifier; imagine that). I got to
know Republican legislators on Beacon Hill because they were close friends with
my Democratic boss. Party affiliations were about political disagreements among
Americans, not markers of antithetical worldviews.
I was, like many people then, a resolute ticket-splitter,
voting often for local Democrats but always for Republican presidents, because
I believed the national GOP was a moderate institution. Ronald Reagan, for
example, disappointed the far right and his evangelical base by reducing
nuclear weapons, leaving abortion rights largely untouched, and granting mass
amnesty to undocumented immigrants (something I objected to at the time).
I first encountered the fringe elements of the
conservative base in 1990, when I went to work in the U.S. Senate for John
Heinz of Pennsylvania. I remember fielding an angry phone call from a
constituent who grilled me about whether the senator was part of a globalist
one-world-government conspiracy.
The country and the GOP were in the hands of Bush, the
ultimate moderate, but extremists were making inroads to power. The populist
demagogue Pat Buchanan, crusading against modernity and multiculturalism,
challenged Bush in 1992 and garnered
23 percent of the Republican-primary vote. Bush, in turn, gave him the
stage at the Republican National Convention in Houston. Buchanan’s speech,
which envisioned a “religious war” for the country, shocked many Americans.
A few years later, Representative Newt Gingrich of
Georgia carried Buchanan’s culture war into the House speakership. For
Gingrich, politics was solely
about winning; his scorched-earth approach treated opponents as enemies and
compromise as treason. He wanted votes, and wasn’t concerned about who was
animated by his viciousness.
Gingrich was eventually driven from the speakership;
Buchanan left the Republican Party to run under the Reform Party, and then
faded from public life. But an example had been set of welcoming extremism
(extreme ideology, extreme tactics) for the sake of winning.
Later Republican presidential nominees—good men such as
John McCain and Mitt Romney—represented the moderate coalition that had brought
people like me into the party. As they stood in the center of the GOP tent,
they began to see who was now lurking in the back. In 2008, the nation saw too,
when McCain had to defend Barack Obama as a “decent family man” to a delusional
town-hall participant who had obviously imbibed racist right-wing propaganda.
Soon after McCain’s loss to Obama, the Tea Party movement
barreled into American politics. I was among those appalled by the Tea
Partiers’ juvenile public behavior and anti-government nihilism; others
believed they represented a new grassroots movement and the future of the
party. In the end, their revolt against government bailouts soured into a giant
yawp of anger at the first Black president. By the time Romney was running
against Obama, in 2012, Trump had launched his political career by pushing the
“birther” lie, which capitalized on racial animus toward the 44th president.
Rather than try to push Trump out of the tent, Romney accepted his endorsement.
McCain came to be viewed as a traitor by the Republican base; Trump made that
permissible by mocking his war-hero status.
In his third run for office, Trump expanded his vote
share despite embracing fascist themes of xenophobia, nationalism, and
glorification of violence. I didn’t want to see what was happening to the
Republican Party, until the durability of Donald Trump made it impossible to
ignore.
***
Was this a radical, unpredictable metamorphosis, or was a
fascist tendency latent in the DNA of the party? To better understand the GOP
in the years before I joined it, I arranged a Zoom call with Stuart Stevens, a
native Mississippian and former Republican operative. Stevens, several years
older than I am, joined the Republicans in his youth rather than the
segregationist local Democrats, then bolted from the party because of Trump. I
asked Stevens to tell me when and where the GOP went wrong, and whether the devolution
into a haven for Nazis was inevitable.
For Stevens, racism is the original sin of the modern
Republican Party. White voters were alienated by the passage of the Civil
Rights Act in 1964 and the violence around the 1968 Democratic primaries. As
Black voters deserted Republicans, the segregationist George Wallace proved
with his ’68 presidential run that white southerners were up for grabs. Richard
Nixon made a cunning and cynical calculation to sweep up those disaffected
white voters, using appeals to “law and order” to stoke racial anxiety. By the
1970s, the GOP was the de facto white party in the United States.
Nixon and Reagan held racist views, as did many men of
their generation. (Nixon was also an anti-Semite.) But they did not govern as
racists, and they certainly weren’t Nazis; neither was Gingrich, Buchanan, or
any national Republican over the past half century. But years of racial
pandering had created a too-big tent, enlarged in the name of electoral
expediency, that offered dark corners for despicable ideologies.
Political realignment also made the GOP vulnerable to
extremism. Democrats became appealing to wealthy suburbanites. Republicans,
whose voters were now less educated and more working-class, gained among white
voters in rural areas and the Rust Belt. Gerrymandering helped turn red
districts redder and blue districts bluer. Democrats’ more diverse
constituencies were a built-in trip wire against politicians who cozied up to
extremists, while Republican-primary candidates—influenced by the rise of talk
radio, Fox News, and the Tea Party—were not subjected to serious moderate
challengers. Unprincipled and bizarre candidates could now thread a path to
victory in ruby-red districts.
Critics of the GOP have long argued that something like
the Trump movement, and the emergence of a new American Nazism, was
inevitable—that conservatism, as a belief system, inevitably decays into
fascism. Stevens, when he left the party, wrote a book with a bitter title: It Was All a Lie.
When I told him how often people quote his title to argue that conservatism
itself was a lie, he rolled his eyes. “We conservatives were right about
everything,” Stevens told me. “Especially about the importance of character.”
I asked the writer Geoffrey Kabaservice, who has
chronicled the decline of Republican moderates, whether the fall of the GOP was
preordained, and why conservatism, once a moralizing movement, became so
vulnerable to figures without moral character.
“I don’t happen to believe that conservatism is one of
those doctrines that is flawed from the get-go,” Kabaservice told me, “and
certainly not in the American context, in which conservatism is a variation on
core liberal principles.” In that sense, he said, Reaganism, the strongest
vehicle of 20th-century American conservatism, didn’t lead directly to
Trumpism—not least because Trump’s vulgar populism is “a repudiation of
conservatism.”
But Reagan’s dominance of the party may have indirectly
set the stage for Trump. Kabaservice brought up the Prussian statesman Otto von
Bismarck, who created a balance-of-power system that worked only because it
relied on Bismarck’s personal influence and political genius; it collapsed
without him. Likewise, Kabaservice argued, Reagan enjoined his party to leave
room in the tent for moderates and to avoid ideological litmus tests, but the
GOP needed Reagan’s “personal magnetism” to keep his followers from spiraling
into hyper-partisanship, or even political fratricide.
Without Reagan, the Reaganite coalition began to dissolve
in the face of Buchanan’s angry populism and Gingrich’s cold opportunism. The
Republican Party, as an institution, weakened over time, until it could be
hijacked by an aspiring dictator. Republican leaders who warned against Trump
in 2016—senators such as Ted Cruz, Lindsey Graham, and Mike Lee—soon discarded
conservative principles to protect their jobs. Their eager amorality has
allowed extreme elements to use the GOP as a vehicle for bigotry and rage.
Racism and hate are now structural parts of the Republican Party, replacing
consensus, compassion, and compromise. Trump started his second presidency by
pardoning the insurrectionists who’d wanted to unlawfully extend his first.
Little wonder that fascists and other miscreants feel welcome.
Conservatives will complain that Democratic Party leaders
have often tolerated their own extremists. People on the right point to radical
professors lionizing Angela Davis, a Communist Party figure who was once on the
FBI’s most-wanted list, or a future president socializing with Bill Ayers, who
co-founded a Marxist militant organization and participated in bombings of the
U.S. Capitol and the New York Police Department headquarters. Ayers may have
casually socialized with a 30-something Barack Obama, but he did not get an
office in the West Wing 15 years later. And no one on the left has shown up to
work dressed like a conquering Nazi general swanning through the streets of
Smolensk, the way Bovino did in the Midwest.
Some Republicans lament these developments and still hold
fast to conservative principles and policy ideas. But their party has laid out
a welcome mat for an ideology that Americans once had to defeat in combat, at
the cost of millions of lives. If wannabe Nazis now confidently roam the halls
of power—and the streets of American cities—it is because Republican leaders
have made them feel at home.
***
What can Americans do in the face of moral rot in a major
political party? The only short-term answers are shaming, shunning, and
mockery—and punishment at the polls. Decent citizens must ostracize those among
them who toy with Hitlerism. Americans—especially journalists—should resist
becoming inured to fascist rhetoric. No one should rely on euphemisms about
“extreme” comments or “fiery” speeches. Call it what it is: Nazi-like behavior.
When a Gen
Z Republican focus group has 20-somethings talking
about how Hitler “was a great leader,” even if “what he was going for was
terrible,” something is amiss not only in the Republican Party but also in
America’s homes, schools, and neighborhoods. Some of these trolls are merely pasting
swastikas on their nihilism, but their ideological sincerity is irrelevant. As
Kurt Vonnegut wrote in Mother
Night, his 1961 novel about a man posing as a Nazi: “We are what we
pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.”
Whatever their intentions, some Americans are expressing
or abetting ancient hatreds, smirking at the mention of Hitler, and plastering
public spaces with images that Allied soldiers once tore from the walls of
destroyed German cities. Political leaders who encourage or tolerate such
scoundrels should be driven from office.
The Republicans have a Nazi problem, yes. But this means
that the United States also has a Nazi problem. The responsibility for
defeating it in the 21st century falls, as it did in the 20th, to everyone—of
any party or creed—who still believes in the American idea.