The Big Question: Can the U.S. Defuse Violent Right-Wing Extremism?

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(Bloomberg Opinion) -- This is one of a series of interviews by Bloomberg Opinion columnists on how to solve today’s most pressing policy challenges. It has been condensed and edited.

Romesh Ratnesar: The Jan. 6 storming of the Capitol was an alarming assault on American democracy. You served in the Obama administration and are now the head of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which is at the forefront of monitoring and fighting hate groups and violent extremism. Did what happened on Wednesday come as a surprise to you?

Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO, Anti-Defamation League: What I would say is that it was shocking, but not surprising. The attack on the Capitol was in many ways a bookend of what you saw play out in the summer of 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia — from Charlottesville to Capitol Hill. In Charlottesville, you had hardcore white supremacists who converged on that college town and marched out in the open, unapologetic and unafraid. And then you had a president who said in the aftermath, “There were fine people on both sides.” At ADL, we are the oldest anti-hate group in the world. We have been tracking extremists and fighting this battle for generations. We monitor these actors, not just on the public web, but you know, in their private messaging spaces. And when I say they feel emboldened, I’m saying that because that’s what they were saying. They were saying, verbatim, “We feel emboldened.”

In the intervening years, you had white-supremacist media being credentialed by the White House. You had extremists showing up in meetings in the Oval Office. You had interns flashing the white supremacist “OK” sign in photos. You had the president adopting not just their rhetoric but their ideas and enshrining them in policy. You had moments like last fall, when asked to condemn white supremacists, he told the Proud Boys to stand back and stand by. For years, the president has been undermining so many of our institutions — Congress, the Democratic Party, members of his own party who disagree with him, the judiciary, the civil service, a free press. He has been taking a sledgehammer to the very foundations of our system. And then, of course, for the last six months, he has been relentlessly going after our electoral process, which is the invisible firmament that holds those institutions together.

And so, after years of this behavior, what we saw on Jan. 6 was the culmination. But whereas in Charlottesville, you had hardcore white supremacists, you had something profoundly different on Wednesday. When they stormed the Capitol, you had the extremists in front, but then you had hundreds of ordinary Americans behind them. If Charlottesville was the introduction of extremism in the political conversation, Wednesday was the normalization of extremism. That is a frightening development. I would describe it as nothing less than maybe the darkest day our democracy has ever seen.