Sen. Bill Hagerty Hires Adviser Known for Racist Writing
Republican Bill Hagerty, who began representing Tennessee as a senator this year, quietly brought in an adviser named Julia Hahn, a former Trump official known for her racist writings and connections to the white nationalist movement.
Hagerty announced that he hired Hahn on Jan. 28, along with other figures who served under former President Trump. In October, Hatewatch reported on previously private emails Hahn sent to her former Breitbart News colleague Katie McHugh that revealed those connections to white identity extremists. Hahnâs writing at Breitbart News stands out for the degree to which it repeatedly and selectively portrays non-white people, immigrants and Muslims as posing a danger to white Americans.
âHow many whites have been killed by blacks since Obama has been in office?â Hahn wrote to McHugh in an apparently unpublished July 2016 Breitbart News story pitch.
Hahn is not from Tennessee, but rather .
Judd Deere, a former White House spokesperson, told Hatewatch in October that Hahn ârejects racism and hatred in all formsâ but did not deny the authenticity of the emails that demonstrated her connection to white nationalist figures. Hagerty also hired Deere, the senator said in the same Jan. 28 announcement. Hatewatch reached out twice to Hagertyâs office for a comment on his hiring of Hahn and asked directly if his hiring of her suggested that he was sympathetic to the way she portrayed non-white people in her writing. On the second attempt, someone replied that Hatewatch should once again get in touch with Deere. Hatewatch asked for his current contact information, but the person did not provide it.
Trump, Paul Nehlen and now Bill Hagerty
Other than Trump, the political figure Hahn most closely associated herself with before coming to work for Hagerty is white nationalist Paul Nehlen, who lost in landslide fashion in two consecutive campaigns to represent Wisconsin in the U.S. House. Hatewatch found that Hahn wrote a staggering 36 different posts for the highly trafficked Breitbart News hyping Nehlenâs candidacy, giving the obscure congressional challenger a national profile he would not have easily otherwise obtained.
After losing his second election in 2018, Nehlen began using his platform as a public figure to openly celebrate far-right terrorism. For example, a terrorist murdered 23 people and injured 23 others by opening fire in an El Paso, Texas, Walmart in August 2019, allegedly in the name of an anti-immigrant ideology. Nehlen posted a photo of a victim of the attack bleeding on the floor on the messaging app Telegram and wrote, âPew pew pew to the dome.â He then reposted another personâs comment that read, âClean up in aisle 4!â Neither Hahn nor Deere addressed her efforts to hype Nehlenâs candidacy in responding to Hatewatchâs request for comment back in October. Nehlen has also made comments wherein he fantasized about .
Perpetuating the election fraud lie
Hagertyâs office issued a press release on Jan. 2, calling Joe Bidenâs victory in the 2020 election âtaintedâ and adding that he and fellow Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn would vote against certifying the Electoral College on Jan. 6.
âTennesseans elected us as their United States Senators to represent their views and values in Washington and to always fight for them, which is why we have concluded without any reservation that we will stand against tainted electoral results from the recent Presidential election,â .
A group of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol building in an insurrection attempt on Jan. 6, motivated largely by the false belief that Trump won the election and Democrats stole it from him. The insurrection attempt left and made the growing threat of far-right extremism in America an international news story. Hatewatch reached out to Hagerty for clarification about what he meant by âtainted,â and whether his new adviser Hahn also thought the same thing about the results of the 2020 election. Hagerty after the violence and voted to certify Bidenâs victory.
Hahnâs connections to white nationalists
Hahn is connected to the white nationalist non-profit VDARE, Hatewatch found while reviewing her emails. VDARE has published apologia regarding the ideologies espoused by far-right terrorists and has defended the white supremacist âUnite the Rightâ rally staged in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017. Hahn called VDARE founder Peter Brimelow by his first name in her emails to McHugh, suggesting a degree of familiarity with him.
âOf course sheâs been âtied to me,â because the CultMarx thug groups were desperate to smear Trump (and now, apparently, Hagerty). They just lie, donât you realize that?â Nashville Scene on Jan. 29 about Hatewatch's reporting. âLike many of us in [sic] immigration patriot catacomb, I had a couple of minimal contacts with Julia Hahn when she was working for Ingraham and researching immigration. I donât think anything since 2015-16.â
When Hatewatch reached out to Brimelow about Hahn for the October story, he asked the reporter to unblock him on Twitter.
Before joining the Trump White House as an aide, Hahn also attended a writerâs workshop hosted by The Social Contract Press, a white nationalist hate group, the emails McHugh leaked to Hatewatch revealed. McHughâs leaked emails also showed Hahn met with white nationalist Scott Greer prior to joining the Trump White House as an aide. The Daily Caller said it would no longer publish Greer after news surfaced that he wrote for white nationalist Richard Spencerâs publication Radix Journal under a pseudonym. Hahn also collaborated with staff at the anti-immigrant hate group Center for Immigration Studies to write articles portraying non-white immigrants in a negative light, the emails showed.
Photo illustration by ĂŰĚŇ´ŤĂ˝