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North Country Rep. Stefanik denies embracing racist 'replacement theory'

United States Army Specialist Pi/U.S. Army photo by Spc. Pierre O
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EDITOR'S NOTE: EMILY RUSSELL IS A REPORTER WITH NORTH COUNTRY PUBLIC RADIO

Congresswoman Elise Stefanik's name was all over the news earlier this week. National news outlets like the Washington Post and the New York Times were reporting on Stefanik and replacement theory - the false idea that there’s a plot to outweigh white voters with non-white immigrants.

Stefanik’s ally, conservative talk show host Tucker Carlson has overtly defended the racist theory.

Here's New York Times reporter Nick Confessore speaking Monday on the podcast The Daily.

“It’s not just Fox News, you have GOP... Elise Stefanik, who is the third-ranking Republican in Congress released a campaign ad on Facebook claiming that Democrats were plotting a “permanent election insurrection by granting amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants.”

Those Facebook ads ran last September. In one of them, a crowd of Latino-looking people is reflected in President Biden’s sunglasses. Big, bold text says “Stop Election Insurrection.” Stefanik’s ad falsely claims that Democrats are trying to flood the American electorate with millions of illegal immigrants

While some Republican leaders like Stefanik don’t explicitly mention racist ideologies, the Times’ Confessore says the message appears clear.

I think you can hear and see the echoes of replacement theory in their own language, of real Americans being disempowered, even cheated by immigrants and their enablers in the elite and the ruling class.

Stefanik denies any embrace of replacement theory. Her office declined an interview request, but her senior advisor Alex DeGrasse said in a statement the Congresswoman has never advocated for any racist positions. DeGrasse called members of the media QUOTE “groveling hacks” and said Stefanik supports legal immigration.

Paul Smith’s College professor Joe Henderson writes about white nationalism.

“When I read those ads or those tweets, I see her speaking to a white electorate and trying to make them afraid.”

Henderson thinks Stefanik is using fear and outrage for her own political gain. But some members of her own party say she’s taking it too far. Illinois Republican Adam Kinzinger tweeted on Sunday that Stefanik is pushing replacement theory. Yesterday, Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney tweeted that Republican leaders are enabling white nationalism, white supremacy, and anti-semitism.

Joe Henderson says racist and white supremacist ideology does have supporters in Stefanik’s North Country district. Henderson lives in Saranac Lake, where folks fly confederate flags and other white nationalist and pro-militia symbols.

“I look around at some of the punisher logos in my community and three percenter flags that are flying around and there’s clearly a taste for that in the area. If you look at some of the maps of extremist groups, there are white supremacist groups in the area, there are militia groups in the area.”

A poll from the AP released last week found that a third of Americans think there is a conspiracy to replace white voters with immigrants. Henderson says pushback from fellow Republicans and reporting from major news outlets like the New York Times, the Washington Post and Politico likely won’t change Stefanik’s approach.

“I think the only thing that is going to have an effect on someone like Elise Stefanik is if the voters of this district tire of it. What is New York 21 going to do about this, about this increasing radicalization of our representative?”

Voters in the North Country have consistently reelected Stefanik to Congress. Since she was first elected in 2014, Stefanik has won every race by a double-digit margin. In a tweet on Monday, she said she looks forward to running for reelection this fall.