Newsweek

Why Is the Alt-Right Falling Apart?

A year after Donald Trump’s inauguration, the alt-right seems to be floundering, and many of its leaders did not see this coming.
White nationalist Richard Spencer, center, and his supporters clash with Virginia State Police in Emancipation Park after the "Unite the Right" rally was declared an unlawful gathering on August 12, 2017, in Charlottesville, Virginia.
PER_AltRight_01_830755846

Updated | “Hail Trump!” Richard Spencer bellowed. “Hail our people! Hail victory!”

It was November 2016, not long after Donald Trump’s surprising presidential victory, and Spencer, perhaps America’s most well-known figure in the so-called alt-right, was speaking to a packed room of white nationalists in Washington, D.C. A clip of the speech, first published by The Atlantic, went viral and seemed to confirm the worst fears of many Trump critics: that the president-elect had empowered a fringe movement of racist, right-wing radicals and launched it into the mainstream.

But less than 18 months later, on March 5, 2018, Spencer spoke in front of another room of like-minded supporters, this time at Michigan State University. Only now, the audience was smaller than the one in D.C., and Spencer seemed far less triumphant. “We are going to have to suffer through these birth pangs of becoming a real movement,” Spencer said, referring to the scattered crowd. Outside, a smattering of self-identified neo-Nazis

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek4 min read
Wildlife Crossings Are a Bear Necessity
A MOOSE, A DEER AND A FOX walk into a tunnel. It might sound like the setup for a joke, but it’s a scene that wildlife ecologist Patricia Cramer captured while studying how animals use wildlife crossings. “This bull moose comes into the culvert in th
Newsweek13 min read
Red Cows, Gaza And The End Of The World
IT IS SAID THAT THIS IS WHERE THE WORLD began—and perhaps where it will end. The true epicenter of the war in the Holy Land is not the devastated Gaza Strip, under Israeli assault since Hamas’ bloody raid last October sparked the region’s deadliest c
Newsweek1 min read
Flood Hopes Stall
Young men inspect the wreck of a vehicle among piles of debris swept along by waters in the village of Kamuchiri, located roughly 30 miles northwest of Kenyan capital Nairobi, on April 29 amid torrential rain and flash floods. Officials said at least

Related Books & Audiobooks