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Ali Alexander
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How did Ali (Akbar) Alexander, instigator of a Stop the Steal rally that turned into an assault on the U.S. Capitol, descend into right-wing extremism? We know Alexander has legal and political ties to Alabama's band of Republican swamp creatures, but his personal roots are in Louisiana and Texas. A veteran chronicler of Louisiana politics says Alexander was an unlikely candidate to become a Trump-supporting radical. Writes Lamar White Jr., under the headline "Theater of the Absurd: How A Louisiana Extremist Helped the Trump Campaign Manufacture Outrage," at the Bayou Brief:
After amassing more than 350,000 followers, Facebook banned the group “Stop the Steal” once members began posting calls to incite violence at planned protests across the country.
The protests were the brainchild of Ali
Alexander, a controversial far-right operative who boasts more than
140,000 followers on Twitter, where he’s simply @ali.
“Alexander appears to be involved with Stop The Steal both through
his tweets promoting it and through his links to one of the websites
boosting it,” Mother Jones reported.
“Stopthesteal.us’s domain is registered to Vice and Victory, a possibly
defunct political consultancy he’s affiliated with. After clicking the
site’s donate button, visitors are prompted with the option to donate
money to one of several cryptocurrency addresses associated with
Alexander, or given links to his Paypal, CashApp, and Amazon wishlists.”
Here in Louisiana, Alexander is better known by his legal name, Ali
Akbar. Although he now lives in Texas, for the past four years,
Alexander resided in Baton Rouge, a fact that has gone virtually
unnoticed in the torrent of coverage he’s recently generated.
How did Alexander become a national figure in the 2020 elections? White provides insight:
In June 2019, Alexander made national headlines
for a racist tweet that asserted Kamala Harris was not “an American
Black” because her father was Jamaican. His comment was retweeted and
then later deleted by the president’s son, Donald Trump, Jr. The next month, Alexander was one of several controversial figures invited to the White House’s “social media summit.”
Alexander has a talent for separating right-wing financial backers from their money, and that has helped fuel his rise:
According to a 2018 Politico report,
the night before the 2016 election, a PAC advised by Alexander
received a $60,000 donation from hedge-fund billionaire Robert Mercer,
the pro-Trump billionaire,” Right Wing Watch’s Jared Holt reported in
September. “Alexander has associated with far-right figures including Unite the Right white supremacist attendee Matt Colligan, and made a habit of noting when members of the media he criticizes are Jewish, according to The Observer.”
In an August profile of Alexander, the Daily Dot
reported that he had “found a niche among the likes of anti-Muslim
activist and Republican Florida congressional candidate Laura Loomer and
blundering political fraudster Jacob Wohl….The trio went to Minneapolis in June 2019 to film a documentary called Importing Ilhan,
which was severely mocked online for lacking credibility. The video
they produced was aimed at proving Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) had married
her brother. While filming, they also wore bulletproof jackets only to report fake death threats against themselves to
authorities.”
Weeks before the election, Alexander promoted a website that floated the bogus claim that Joe Biden secretly suffered from Parkinson’s disease.
Alexander recently confirmed his role in the Stop the Steal protests
to me via text message. He was not present at the event in Baton Rouge;
instead, he attended a protest in Austin, alongside Infowars founder
Alex Jones.
Although he tells me that the event in Baton Rouge came together in
only 23 hours, he previously announced plans for the event—and similar
events across the nation—nearly two months ago. (He says he abandoned
these plans some time in October).
“In the next coming days, we’re going to build the infrastructure to stop the steal,” Alexander said in a Periscope video posted in early September.
“What we are going to do is we’re going to bypass all of social media.
In the coming days, we will launch an effort concentrating on the swing
states, and we will map out where the votes are being counted and the
secretary of states. We will map all of this out for everyone publicly
and we will collect cell phone numbers so that way if you are within 100
mile radius of a bad secretary of state or someone who’s counting votes
after the deadline or if there’s a federal court hearing, we will alert
you of where to go. We’re going to bypass all of Twitter, all of
Facebook, all of Instagram, OK? We’re going to bypass it all.”
A few days prior, Alexander claimed to be at least partly responsible for organizing an armed mob outside of the Maricopa County Election Center,
and when it started to become clear that Joe Biden would pull off an
upset in Georgia, the Trump campaign filed a lawsuit seeking to halt the
count, based solely on an affidavit provided to them by Sean Pumphrey
of South Carolina, who the Bayou Brief has discovered to be connected to Alexander via Facebook. The lawsuit was quickly dismissed.
White has watched Alexander operate up close, and he reports that Alexander's initial reaction to Trump was unenthusiastic:
I’ve known Ali since 2015, when he served as the Digital Director of
Republican Jay Dardenne’s gubernatorial campaign. We’ve appeared
opposite of one another at least twice on Jim Engster’s statewide talk
radio show, where the conversations were always civil and substantive,
which is one of the reasons I’ve been so surprised to discover how
dramatically different the “Ali Alexander” of social media stardom is
from the Ali Akbar I knew through Louisiana politics. (After learning
that he was the owner of the Twitter handle @louisiana, I also
unsuccessfully lobbied him at least twice to let me take over the
dormant account).
Engster’s impression of the young activist was similar to mine. “Ali
was a passionate and true believer of conservative politics, not an
opportunist like many of his cohorts,” Engster recalled.
To those who know him exclusively through his work in Louisiana,
Ali’s evolution into full-blown MAGA diehard—and his transformation into
an outspoken and notorious firebrand—seems remarkable for a few
reasons, not the least of which being that he was initially a reluctant
supporter of Trump. In hindsight, however, it now seems obvious that his
ambivalence was largely performative.
“I think he destroyed my party, and I hate the campaign he’s
running,” Ali wrote on Facebook about Trump a few days before the final
round of primary contests in 2016. He added, “But I’ll gladly choose him
over Hillary Clinton and the violent leftist mob.”
The two had actually met well before Trump descended down the golden
escalators. According to Ali, he had been “the only person sitting in
the room” when an unnamed Republican candidate sought Trump’s support at
the 2014 Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans. The future
president was impressed by how much Ali resembled Sammy Davis, Jr., he
said, and they ended up talking with one another for close to 45
minutes. Apparently, he’d left an impression. Years later, when Ali
visited the White House, Trump remembered the Sammy Davis lookalike.
At the 2014 RLC, Ali also snapped a photo of the Donald being
interviewed for a podcast hosted by the new head of Andrew Breitbart’s
media empire.
Alexander launched his political brand in Louisiana. Writes White:
Notably, Ali’s involvement in Louisiana predates the 2015
gubernatorial campaign. A few months after the RLC in New Orleans, a
mysterious new political action committee, Black Conservatives Fund,
announced they would be opening their first-ever state chapter in
Louisiana. “It’s unclear who will be leading the group’s efforts in
Louisiana or the scale of those efforts,” The Advocate reported at the time.
The Black Conservatives Fund, as it turns out, was Ali Akbar. (He has
recently used the PAC’s Twitter account to amplify his other
endeavors). Although it’s been dormant since 2016, according to the
organization’s last FEC report, it’s still sitting on more than $200,000
in cash.
The Black Conservatives Fund appears to have largely been a proxy for
former Louisiana state Sen. Elbert Guillory, a Black Republican from
Opelousas. The PAC emerged during the 2014 Senate race between
three-term incumbent Democrat Mary Landrieu and Republican congressman
Bill Cassidy. At the time, Guillory was putting together what would be
an ultimately unsuccessful campaign for lieutenant governor.
The PAC first made waves after releasing secretly recorded audio of
Landrieu’s then-Chief of Staff, Don Cravins, Jr. (whose father, one of
Guillory’s political nemeses, was then serving as Mayor of Opelousas)
promising a gathering of Democrats that Landrieu would continue
supporting President Obama “97 percent of the time” if re-elected.
Cassidy’s entire campaign had been built on the message that Landrieu
was merely a rubber-stamp for the Democratic president, who was deeply
unpopular in Louisiana. The statistic, however, was grossly misleading.
Landrieu was known for her independent streak, and using the same
metric, Cassidy, as a member of the House, had also voted in support of bills that were later signed into law by President Obama 97 percent of the time.
To many, Cassidy’s message was nothing more than a dog whistle, and
Cravins’ comments, which were delivered in front of a majority Black
audience, were not a confession of anything duplicitous; rather, they
were a statement of support for the nation’s first Black president. The
Black Conservatives Fund’s other major play in the 2014 campaign was an
expensive robocall targeting Black voters that selectively edited
comments Landrieu made to conservative talk radio host Jeff Crouere
about the Affordable Care Act in order to imply that she had voted against President Obama.
At the time, Alexander had still been living in Fort Worth, and when
the Dardenne campaign hired him as a Digital Director, he hadn’t yet
built an online persona. Even his role in the Black Conservatives Fund
had been obscured; he called himself a “senior advisor” and, for the
most part, preferred to stay behind-the-scenes. Privately, those
involved in Dardenne’s campaign have expressed regret over hiring
Alexander and claim to be appalled by the dirty tricks that have become a
hallmark of his brand.
When I asked him about his Stop the Steal campaign, Ali provided
what, to me, seemed like a perfectly reasonable argument in favor of
free, fair, and transparent elections; he also distanced himself from
the theories espoused by Whitney. “(The) only uniting message for
StopTheSteal is that the election should be predictable and the counting
should be transparent,” he wrote. “It’s not. And we feel like things
are being hidden so open it up or we’ll assume the worst.” But the
measured words and tone he expressed to me privately are belied by his
online antics, and it’s impossible not to be alarmed and deeply
concerned by the very real chance that Ali endangers himself and others
with his reckless hyperbole. (He’s taken to wearing a bulletproof vest
when he appears in public).
But more than anything else, Ali’s decision to begin planning the
infrastructure for Stop the Steal long before the first ballot had ever
been cast suggests that these protests were going to happen regardless
of how the election actually shaped up.
Like Sammy Davis, Jr., Ali Alexander is one helluva performer, and the show must go on.