Paul Nehlen
Paul Nehlen is an American manufacturing executive, inventor, and political activist based in Wisconsin, best known for mounting primary challenges against House Speaker Paul Ryan in the Republican contests for the state's 1st congressional district in 2016 and 2018.[1] With over three decades in the manufacturing sector, beginning on the factory floor and advancing to executive roles managing operations across North America, Europe, and Asia, Nehlen holds at least seven U.S. patents related to filtration technologies and founded AquaRevival, a company developing regenerative media filtration systems for water treatment.[2][3] Nehlen's 2016 campaign garnered 16% of the primary vote against Ryan, highlighting concerns over trade deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership that he argued offshored American jobs, alongside calls for stricter immigration enforcement and border security measures, including personal donations of equipment such as AR-15 rifles to Texas border sheriffs.[4][5] In 2018, after Ryan's retirement announcement, Nehlen received about 11% in a multi-candidate field won by Bryan Steil, continuing to emphasize economic nationalism and skepticism toward globalist policies.[6][7] Post-campaign, Nehlen's online advocacy shifted toward explicit defenses of white ethnic interests, critiques of demographic changes in Western societies, and observations on group differences in intelligence and behavior, drawing accusations of racism and anti-Semitism from organizations like the Anti-Defamation League and Southern Poverty Law Center—groups with histories of expansive definitions of extremism that have encompassed mainstream conservative figures.[8][9] These positions led to permanent deplatforming from Twitter in 2018 for tweets including a mocked-up image targeting Meghan Markle and alleged doxxing, followed by bans from Facebook and Instagram in 2019 as part of broader actions against figures deemed to promote hate speech, despite Nehlen's prior pushes for federal protections against social media censorship of political speech.[10][11][12]Early Life and Education
Childhood and Family Background
Paul Nehlen was born and raised in Ohio.[13] His father, Paul F. Nehlen Jr. (September 11, 1945–August 10, 2021), was born in Zanesville, Ohio, and spent much of his life in Brookfield, Ohio, where he worked and raised his family.[14][15] Nehlen's family maintained deep roots in Ohio across generations, including his paternal grandfather, Paul F. Nehlen Sr., born in the state in 1917.[16] He has one sibling, a sister named Nicole Osborne.[14]Academic and Early Professional Experience
Nehlen began his professional career in manufacturing at the age of 18, starting as a maintenance mechanic on the factory floor.[4][17] This entry-level role marked the outset of over 30 years of experience in the industry, during which he advanced through operational and managerial positions.[4] While working, Nehlen pursued higher education, attending Widener University before earning a Bachelor of Applied Studies in engineering from the University of Delaware between 1998 and 2002.[18] He subsequently obtained a Master of Business Administration from the University of Phoenix from 2002 to 2005.[18] These degrees supported his progression to executive roles, including managing factories across the United States and internationally for Fortune 500 companies.[19] Nehlen's early career emphasized practical experience in manufacturing operations, where he developed expertise as a turnaround specialist and inventor, holding several patents related to industrial processes.[4] His trajectory from factory floor labor to global leadership underscored a self-made path in the sector prior to entering politics.Professional Career
Business Roles and Achievements
Paul Nehlen commenced his professional career in manufacturing at age 18, starting on the factory floor and accumulating over 30 years of experience in the industry.[20] He advanced through roles in middle management and executive leadership, overseeing business operations for Fortune 500 companies with global footprints spanning North America, Europe, and Asia.[20] As an inventor and entrepreneur, Nehlen holds seven U.S. patents, along with additional international patents and several pending applications related to manufacturing and operational innovations.[20] These contributions underscore his focus on practical advancements in industrial processes, though specific patent details remain tied to proprietary business applications. In 2018, Nehlen founded AquaRevival, serving as its president and driving the development of regenerative media filtration systems designed for efficiency in sectors such as aquatics, food and beverage, agriculture, and industrial applications.[3] [21] The company's products emphasize compact, safer, and smarter filtration technologies, positioning it as a disruptor in water treatment markets.[21]Manufacturing and Economic Contributions
Nehlen accumulated over 30 years of experience in the manufacturing sector, beginning at age 18 on the factory floor in maintenance roles before advancing to executive positions overseeing operations for Fortune 500 companies across North America, Europe, and Asia.[4] His career involved managing global supply chains and production processes, including collaborations with firms such as Dell and Newegg in equipment and electronics-related manufacturing.[4] As a turnaround specialist, Nehlen focused on engineering corporate recoveries and factory revitalizations, with an emphasis on repatriating production facilities from overseas to the United States to counter offshoring trends.[22][23] This work aimed to restore domestic manufacturing capacity, though specific job creation metrics from his projects remain undocumented in public records. Nehlen contributed to manufacturing innovation through inventions, holding seven U.S. patents—along with international and pending filings—covering advancements in filtration systems and production techniques, such as multi-segmented tube sheets for improved structural integrity in industrial filters (U.S. Patent 9,581,395, granted April 25, 2017) and regenerative media filtration methods to enhance fluid processing efficiency (U.S. Patent 11,673,079, granted June 13, 2023). These patents, developed during his tenure at Neptune-Benson, LLC, addressed challenges in water treatment and industrial separation, enabling more durable and effective manufacturing equipment. In 2018, Nehlen founded AquaRevival, an industrial machinery firm producing regenerative media filtration systems for sectors including aquatics, food and beverage, agriculture, and general industry.[24] The company's American-made products emphasize compact, low-maintenance designs that reduce operational costs and environmental impact compared to traditional systems.[21] In February 2025, AquaRevival secured NSF International certification as the first filter manufacturer to meet enhanced standards for cryptosporidium reduction under NSF/ANSI/CAN 50, bolstering U.S. competitiveness in advanced water purification technology.[25] These developments support economic resilience by fostering innovation in domestic equipment production, potentially aiding industries reliant on efficient filtration amid global supply chain vulnerabilities.Political Ideology and Positions
Immigration Policy and National Sovereignty
Nehlen advocated for robust border security measures as essential to maintaining U.S. national sovereignty, including the construction of a physical wall along the southern border to prevent illegal entries and safeguard domestic interests.[26] In July 2016, during his primary challenge to incumbent Paul Ryan, he staged a protest at Ryan's Janesville, Wisconsin residence, highlighting the hypocrisy of Ryan's personal property fence while opposing federal border fortifications, and demanded Ryan "tear down your wall if you won't build one for the country."[26] Nehlen criticized Ryan's support for the 2018 omnibus spending bill, which allocated funds for border barriers in other nations but omitted comprehensive financing for a continuous U.S. southern wall, arguing it undermined sovereignty by prioritizing foreign aid over domestic protection.[27] His immigration stance prioritized an "America First" framework, rejecting policies that he contended diluted national cohesion and economic stability. Nehlen opposed expansive family-based immigration, known as chain migration, viewing it as a mechanism that overburdened resources without ensuring cultural or economic compatibility, and aligned with calls to replace it with merit-based criteria favoring skilled contributors.[28] He specifically questioned the assimilation challenges posed by immigration from Muslim-majority countries, stating in August 2016 that the U.S. should reconsider admitting Muslims due to incompatible ideological risks, echoing temporary restrictions proposed by Donald Trump to mitigate terrorism threats.[29] Nehlen framed uncontrolled immigration as an erosion of sovereignty, asserting that porous borders enabled demographic shifts and welfare strain without reciprocal benefits to citizens. In his campaigns, he linked immigration enforcement to preserving self-governance, arguing that failure to halt illegal inflows and reform legal pathways invited foreign influences that superseded American priorities, a position he contrasted with Ryan's record on comprehensive reform bills perceived as amnesty-enabling.[30] These views, while drawing support from restrictionist factions, faced mainstream media portrayal as extreme, though Nehlen maintained they reflected empirical patterns of crime, fiscal costs, and cultural friction documented in federal data on immigrant outcomes.[8]America First Nationalism
Paul Nehlen articulated America First nationalism as a framework prioritizing U.S. sovereignty, economic protectionism, and citizen welfare over globalist agendas, drawing inspiration from Donald Trump's 2016 campaign.[31] This ideology, as outlined in his 2017 book Wage the Battle, posits that American policies must center on securing national borders, reforming trade to favor domestic manufacturing, and rejecting international agreements that erode U.S. leverage.[31] Nehlen positioned this against establishment figures like Paul Ryan, whom he accused of advancing corporate-driven globalism at the expense of American workers.[31][32] Central to Nehlen's America First stance was immigration restrictionism, advocating enforcement of existing laws, border wall construction, and an end to sanctuary policies to safeguard American communities and jobs.[31] He criticized refugee resettlement programs, particularly those importing large numbers of Muslim migrants, arguing they strained resources and posed security risks without assimilative benefits.[31] On trade, Nehlen proposed a reciprocal tariff system that would automatically adjust based on bilateral deficits, aiming to revive U.S. manufacturing by countering unbalanced deals like NAFTA and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which he claimed accelerated job losses in sectors like his own manufacturing background.[33][31] He credited his 2016 primary challenge to Ryan with amplifying opposition to TPP, contributing to its eventual shelving.[31] In foreign policy, Nehlen's nationalism emphasized unilateralism, urging reduced entanglement in overseas conflicts and a reevaluation of alliances that subsidized foreign defense while neglecting domestic priorities.[31] He supported Trump's "citizens first" approach, including law-and-order enforcement and skepticism toward investigations like the Russia probe, which he viewed as partisan distractions from implementing protective policies.[34][35] Nehlen framed this as a broader rejection of elite cosmopolitanism, asserting that globalist politicians prioritized multinational corporations and foreign labor over American sovereignty, a critique he extended in his campaigns by highlighting Ryan's support for free-trade pacts.[32][31] His positions aligned with a manufacturing-centric worldview, informed by his executive experience, advocating tariffs and domestic investment to restore industrial capacity eroded by offshoring.[33]Critiques of Political Establishment
Nehlen positioned his political challenges as a rebuke to entrenched Republican leadership, accusing figures like Paul Ryan of embodying systemic corruption driven by corporate influence and donor priorities. In announcing his 2016 primary bid, he highlighted Ryan's vote for the December 2015 omnibus spending bill, which allocated $1.8 billion for refugee assistance and funds that critics argued indirectly supported sanctuary cities, as evidence of fiscal irresponsibility and favoritism toward special interests over fiscal conservatism.[36][37] He further critiqued establishment trade policies, condemning Ryan's advocacy for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) as a deal that would offshore American jobs and benefit multinational corporations at the expense of domestic manufacturing, reflecting a broader pattern of Washington elites prioritizing globalist agendas over U.S. workers.[37][38] Nehlen argued that such positions demonstrated how congressional leaders served Wall Street donors rather than constituents, stating Ryan "represents Wall Street donors" who push for amnesty and trade liberalization to secure cheap labor and markets.[39] In a final campaign appeal on August 7, 2016, Nehlen framed his candidacy as an opportunity to dismantle the "corrupt and broken system," declaring that voters could "end the corruption, the corporatism, the kickbacks" and "serfdom to special interests" by rejecting Ryan, whom he described not as a mere symptom but as the system itself.[39] He extended this indictment to the broader political class, portraying Washington as controlled by global special interests that undermine American independence, a theme echoed in his calls for voters to declare independence from elite influence.[30][39] These arguments resonated with populist sentiments but drew limited primary support, as Ryan secured 84% of the vote on August 9, 2016.[40]Initial Support for Donald Trump
Paul Nehlen publicly declared his support for Donald Trump's presidential candidacy on May 6, 2016, stating that he would back Trump as the Republican nominee despite House Speaker Paul Ryan's expressed hesitation to endorse him at that time.[41] This stance positioned Nehlen as an early ally of Trump within the Republican Party, emphasizing shared priorities on trade and manufacturing that Nehlen argued had been undermined by globalist policies favored by establishment figures like Ryan.[41] Nehlen's backing of Trump aligned with his campaign's focus on "America First" principles, including opposition to free trade agreements such as NAFTA and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which he claimed had accelerated job losses in U.S. manufacturing sectors like plastics, where he had professional experience.[42] He contrasted his positions with Ryan's support for such deals, framing Trump as a corrective force against policies that prioritized international interests over domestic workers.[43] In July 2016, Nehlen defended Trump amid controversy over remarks directed at the family of a Muslim U.S. Army captain killed in Iraq, arguing that Trump's comments highlighted legitimate concerns about immigration and national security rather than personal attacks.[44] This defense drew reciprocal praise from Trump, who on August 1, 2016, tweeted thanks to Nehlen for standing by him during the dispute with Ryan, stating, "Paul Nehlen, challenging Crooked Hillary clone Paul Ryan, is a Great Guy. Thank you Paul!"[45] Trump's endorsement amplified Nehlen's profile as a Trump-aligned challenger, though Nehlen later noted that his candidacy predated direct inspiration from Trump and stemmed from broader economic grievances.[42] Following his August 9, 2016, primary loss to Ryan, Nehlen launched a pro-Trump super PAC on August 14, 2016, aimed at bolstering Trump's general election efforts and critiquing Ryan's leadership, signaling sustained commitment to Trump's platform beyond his own race.[46]Views on Foreign Policy and Globalism
Paul Nehlen has articulated a foreign policy stance centered on "America First" principles, prioritizing U.S. national interests over multilateral commitments and international interventions. He opposes what he describes as globalist policies that subordinate American sovereignty to supranational agreements, arguing they erode domestic economic strength and security. In a 2016 op-ed, Nehlen criticized U.S. trade deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) as secretive pacts benefiting multinational elites at the expense of American workers, citing studies from Tufts University and the U.S. International Trade Commission projecting manufacturing job losses under such arrangements.[33] He proposed "balanced trade" through bilateral agreements and tariffs scaled to trade deficits, estimating this could generate hundreds of billions in Treasury revenue while revitalizing U.S. industry.[33] Nehlen's critique of globalism extends to his 2017 book Wage the Battle: Putting America First in the Fight to Stop Globalist Politicians and Secure the Borders, where he positions globalist politicians as enablers of policies that weaken U.S. primacy, including unfavorable trade dynamics and open-border immigration tied to internationalist agendas.[31] This aligns with his broader rejection of entangling alliances, as evidenced by his public opposition to military actions diverging from strict national self-interest. Following President Trump's April 2017 missile strikes on Syria, Nehlen tweeted that the operation contradicted the "America First" doctrine, suggesting it risked unnecessary foreign entanglements reminiscent of prior regime-change efforts.[47][48] Overall, Nehlen's views emphasize restraint in overseas engagements, with resources directed toward domestic priorities like border security and economic protectionism rather than global policing or aid distributions that he implies dilute U.S. leverage.[31] He has framed such positions as a direct counter to establishment figures like Paul Ryan, whom he accused of advancing globalist trade frameworks during his congressional challenges.[33]Perspectives on Ethnic Identity and Cultural Preservation
Nehlen has explicitly identified as a "pro-white" candidate, advocating for the recognition and defense of white ethnic interests as legitimate and comparable to those of other groups. In social media activity during his 2018 campaign against Paul Ryan, he repeatedly appended the hashtag #itsokaytobewhite to his posts, promoting a slogan designed to affirm white identity and challenge narratives portraying such expressions as inherently supremacist.[8][49] This rhetoric positioned white ethnic pride as a counter to perceived cultural stigmatization, with Nehlen arguing that opposition to it reveals inconsistencies in broader societal tolerances for group-based advocacy.[8] Integrating ethnic identity with cultural preservation, Nehlen has described himself as a "pro-White Christian American candidate," framing America's foundational culture as rooted in European-descended traditions that require active safeguarding against dilution. He has linked this to opposition against multiculturalism and demographic changes driven by immigration, asserting that unchecked inflows erode the historical cultural continuity of the nation's white majority.[49][50] In this view, preserving ethnic cohesion among whites is essential to maintaining distinct Western cultural elements, including Christian values and heritage norms, which Nehlen contends are under threat from globalist policies and elite influences.[10]Political Campaigns
2016 Challenge to Paul Ryan
Paul Nehlen, a Delavan, Wisconsin-based manufacturing executive with more than 30 years of experience in the industry, entered the Republican primary for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district on May 6, 2016, as a self-described political outsider challenging incumbent U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan.[51] Nehlen, who had relocated to the district from Colorado earlier that year to establish residency, criticized Ryan for embodying establishment politics and failing to prioritize American workers, drawing on his business background to argue that federal policies had eroded domestic manufacturing.[52] His campaign emphasized opposition to global trade deals, particularly Ryan's support for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which Nehlen claimed would accelerate job losses and offshoring without adequate protections for U.S. industries.[37] Nehlen's platform also targeted immigration policy, advocating for enhanced border security, reduced legal immigration, and an end to what he described as exploitative guest worker programs that undercut American wages.[37] He aligned himself with the rising "America First" rhetoric in the Republican Party, pledging support for Donald Trump's presidential bid while accusing Ryan of insufficient loyalty to conservative principles on issues like Obamacare repeal and fiscal conservatism.[41] The campaign gained national attention in early August 2016 when Trump publicly praised Nehlen on Twitter, stating, "Paul Nehlen is running against Paul Ryan, and is even better than Paul on many issues!"—a nod that highlighted intra-party tensions but stopped short of a formal endorsement.[45] Trump later endorsed Ryan on August 5 amid pressure to unify the party, though Nehlen's team included former Trump campaign aides who amplified his anti-establishment message.[43] [53] Despite the publicity, Nehlen's bid was widely viewed as a longshot, with limited fundraising and organizational support compared to Ryan's entrenched incumbency and institutional backing.[54] On August 9, 2016, Ryan secured a decisive victory in the primary, receiving approximately 84% of the vote to Nehlen's 16%, reflecting strong district loyalty to the Speaker despite broader GOP populist unrest.[55] Nehlen conceded the race that evening, framing it as an initial effort to signal dissatisfaction with congressional leadership, though he garnered endorsements from figures like Ann Coulter, who rallied supporters in the district's final days.[56] The challenge underscored emerging divisions within the Republican Party over trade, immigration, and elite influence, but failed to dislodge Ryan's hold on the district.[40]2018 Primary Campaign and Platform Evolution
Nehlen announced his candidacy for the Republican primary in Wisconsin's 1st congressional district on June 17, 2017, positioning the challenge as a continuation of his 2016 effort to unseat incumbent House Speaker Paul Ryan, whom he criticized for insufficient commitment to America First policies on trade and immigration.[57] Ryan's announcement on April 11, 2018, that he would not seek reelection transformed the race into an open primary, with manufacturing executive Bryan Steil emerging as the establishment-backed frontrunner; Nehlen framed the contest as a test of whether the district would reject Ryan's globalist legacy in favor of stricter nationalism.[58] Nehlen's 2018 platform retained core elements from his 2016 campaign, such as opposition to free trade agreements like NAFTA, demands for enhanced border security, and elimination of H-1B visas to prioritize American workers, but evolved to incorporate explicit advocacy for white ethnic interests and cultural preservation against demographic shifts driven by immigration.[49] Whereas his 2016 rhetoric emphasized economic nationalism and Trump's agenda without overt racial framing, by 2018 Nehlen publicly identified as "pro-White," arguing that policies should prioritize the preservation of white American identity amid what he described as intentional population replacement through mass immigration.[49] This shift aligned with broader critiques of multiculturalism, including calls to end chain migration and refugee resettlement, positioning his campaign as a bulwark against establishment compromises on sovereignty. The August 14, 2018, primary saw Nehlen receive 11% of the vote, finishing behind Steil, who secured the nomination with over 50%, amid a field that included other lesser-known candidates; the result reflected limited mainstream Republican support, as party leaders and outlets like Breitbart distanced themselves following Nehlen's increasingly controversial online statements earlier in the cycle.[59][60] Despite the defeat, Nehlen's vote share indicated a niche appeal among voters disillusioned with Ryan's tenure, though it fell short of his 2016 performance against the incumbent.[6]Online Activity and Platform Restrictions
Social Media Engagement
Paul Nehlen leveraged Twitter as a primary platform for disseminating his political messages during his 2016 and 2018 congressional campaigns, posting regularly on topics including immigration enforcement, trade policies, and critiques of House leadership. His activity intensified in the lead-up to primaries, with frequent updates, retweets of aligned commentators, and responses to current events that resonated with nationalist-leaning users, contributing to rapid follower growth from obscurity to over 89,000 by January 2018.[61] [62] This expansion reflected targeted engagement strategies, such as amplifying "America First" themes and interacting directly with supporters via replies and threads, which fostered a loyal online base despite limited mainstream media coverage.[63] Nehlen's Twitter interactions often involved challenging establishment figures and media narratives, drawing endorsements from fringe influencers while alienating broader Republican audiences; by early 2018, his follower count approached 100,000 amid heightened visibility from policy-focused debates and endorsements of restrictive immigration stances.[64] Engagement metrics, though not publicly detailed by the platform, were evidenced by the account's role in mobilizing online discussions, with posts garnering retweets and replies from users sympathetic to anti-globalist positions. His approach contrasted with traditional campaigning, prioritizing digital amplification over physical rallies, which sustained momentum in his primary bids but escalated platform scrutiny.[61] After Twitter's permanent suspension of his account on February 11, 2018, citing violations of rules against abusive behavior, Nehlen migrated to Gab, an alternative network catering to censored voices, where he maintained posting on similar themes but encountered diminished reach and further moderation issues.[65] [66] Gab banned him in April 2018 following an incident involving the disclosure of a rival's identity, curtailing his presence on even permissive platforms and redirecting efforts to smaller, decentralized sites with limited verifiable engagement data. Subsequent activity on outlets like Telegram or personal blogs yielded niche interactions, primarily among dedicated advocates, but lacked the scale of his pre-ban Twitter era.[67]Specific Controversial Posts and Statements
In January 2018, Nehlen posted a Twitter thread marking media organization employees or associates perceived as Jewish or married to Jews with Stars of David emojis, highlighting alleged Jewish influence in outlets such as Fox News, CNN, and NBC.[8] Later that month, he tweeted a list of 81 Twitter users who had criticized him, asserting, "Of those 81 people, 74 are Jews," and framing this as evidence of coordinated opposition.[50] In the same period, Nehlen frequently appended "#itsokaytobewhite" to his tweets, including responses to public figures like Paul Ryan.[8] Nehlen employed anti-Semitic identifiers in direct attacks, such as tweeting at libertarian activist Ari Cohn in January 2018, labeling him a "(((bigot)))"—using triple parentheses to denote Jewish identity—and accusing him of "pretending to be white" to incite a race war.[8] In December 2017, during an appearance on the "Fash the Nation" podcast, he told commentator John Podhoretz to "eat a bullet" and "self-deport," later referring to his subsequent 12-hour Twitter suspension as being "shoah’d."[8] He also responded to critic John Cardillo with, "You’ve exposed yourself as a shill for the sheckles," invoking a trope of Jewish financial control.[8] On February 9, 2018, Nehlen tweeted an image superimposing the face of Meghan Markle, then fiancée of Prince Harry, onto a depiction of Cheddar Man—a prehistoric Briton reconstructed with dark skin—implying racial incongruity with British heritage, which prompted his permanent Twitter suspension two days later.[10][68] After migrating to Gab and Telegram following platform bans, Nehlen escalated rhetoric endorsing violence. On April 18, 2019, during the "Goy Talk" podcast, he stated, "I’m not opposed to someone … leading a million Robert Bowers to the promised land," referencing the Pittsburgh synagogue shooter. On April 29, 2019, on "The Gas Station" podcast, he praised the Poway synagogue shooter John Earnest, declaring, "I’m not backing away from this kid. I’m heralding his arrival," while celebrating attackers Dylann Roof and Robert Bowers. In a May 15, 2019, Telegram post, he wrote, "Hey k—- I’ve got a message for you: get fukd. [Day of the Rope] real soon," alluding to a white supremacist concept of mass executions.Bans from Major Platforms
In February 2018, Twitter permanently suspended Paul Nehlen's account for violating its rules against hateful conduct, specifically after he posted an image superimposing Meghan Markle's face onto a depiction of Cheddar Man, a prehistoric dark-skinned individual from Britain, which was widely criticized as racially mocking her mixed-race heritage.[10][68] This followed a one-week suspension earlier that month for anti-Semitic remarks.[69] On May 2, 2019, Facebook banned Nehlen from its platform and Instagram, classifying him among "dangerous individuals" who repeatedly violated policies prohibiting hate speech and content promoting violence or attacks on people based on protected characteristics such as race or ethnicity.[70][71] The action was part of a broader enforcement wave targeting figures including Alex Jones and Louis Farrakhan for similar repeated infractions.[72] These restrictions limited Nehlen's reach on mainstream social media, prompting activity on alternative sites.Controversies and Public Reception
Accusations of Racism and Anti-Semitism
In December 2017, Nehlen appeared on the "Fash the Nation" podcast, where he suggested that Jewish commentator John Podhoretz "eat a bullet" and "self-deport," and referred to his own Twitter suspension as being "shoah’d," invoking the Hebrew term for the Holocaust in a demeaning manner.[8] The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) characterized these statements as anti-Semitic, citing their promotion of violent rhetoric against Jews and trivialization of historical atrocities.[8] On December 27, 2017, Breitbart News severed ties with Nehlen after he posted tweets deemed anti-Semitic, including one accusing commentator John Cardillo of being a "shill for the sheckles," employing a slur referencing Jewish stereotypes about money.[73] Nehlen responded by claiming opposition to "double standards" rather than endorsing anti-Semitism.[73] In January 2018, the ADL accused Nehlen of escalating anti-Semitic rhetoric by using triple parentheses (((echoes))) in a Twitter attack on Jewish libertarian Ari Cohn, writing "just admit you are a (((bigot)))" and alleging Cohn pretended to be white to incite a race war.[8] The ADL further highlighted Nehlen's use of Stars of David emojis to tag Jewish media employees at outlets like Fox News, CNN, and NBC, interpreting this as promoting conspiracy theories of Jewish media control.[8] Nehlen incorporated the hashtag "#itsokaytobewhite," which the ADL linked to white supremacist campaigns.[8] On January 30, 2018, Nehlen tweeted a list of 81 Twitter critics of his "America First" positions, asserting that 74 were Jewish, which drew widespread condemnation as anti-Semitic for targeting individuals based on ethnicity.[50][62] In a private Twitter direct message group around this period, Nehlen reportedly claimed his critics were "working for the Jewish media," prompting further accusations of anti-Semitic scapegoating.[74] On February 12, 2018, Nehlen posted an edited image superimposing the face of Meghan Markle, then fiancée of Prince Harry, onto a depiction of Cheddar Man—a prehistoric Briton reconstructed with dark skin—implying racial incompatibility with British heritage, which Twitter deemed a violation of rules against racist abuse and led to his permanent ban.[10][68] British outlets like the Daily Mirror labeled the tweet "racist."[75] The Wisconsin Republican Party withdrew support from Nehlen on February 14, 2018, citing his "racist and anti-Semitic tweets."[76]Advocacy for White Interests and Responses
Nehlen explicitly positioned himself as a "pro-White" candidate during his 2018 congressional campaign, arguing that white Americans' collective interests warranted political prioritization akin to advocacy for other ethnic groups.[10][50] He contended that policies on immigration, media representation, and cultural narratives often disadvantaged whites, citing examples like genetic studies on ancient Britons (e.g., Cheddar Man) as attempts to "disappear whites or dispossess whites of their heritage."[68] In a December 2017 tweet, Nehlen stated, "Hey, American Jews, I'm not putting Israel first or compromising pro-White interests for yours," framing his stance as a refusal to subordinate white demographic and economic concerns to foreign or minority-group priorities.[77] This rhetoric marked an evolution from his 2016 America First nationalism toward overt white identity politics, including hiring Kevin MacDonald—a scholar critical of perceived Jewish influences on immigration policies—as a campaign spokesman to bolster arguments for safeguarding white majorities.[78] Responses to Nehlen's advocacy were sharply divided, with mainstream conservative outlets distancing themselves amid accusations of extremism. Breitbart News severed ties with him on December 27, 2017, following his tweet on Israel and white interests, with executive chairman Steve Bannon declaring Nehlen "dead to me and to the movement."[77][79] Advocacy groups like the Anti-Defamation League condemned his positions as white supremacist, equating "pro-White" advocacy with racial exclusionism, while the Southern Poverty Law Center profiled him as promoting terrorism-adjacent ideologies.[8][9] Media coverage, including from Vox and The Washington Post, portrayed his campaign as an alt-right test case for injecting white nationalism into GOP primaries, contributing to his deplatforming from Twitter on February 13, 2018, after a post mocking Meghan Markle's ancestry in racial terms.[49][68] Some right-wing figures offered partial defenses, questioning the fairness of his bans rather than endorsing the substance. Fox News host Laura Ingraham, in a May 30, 2019, monologue, criticized tech platforms for suppressing voices like Nehlen's under vague "hate speech" pretexts, prompting advertiser backlash but network support.[80] Nehlen garnered 11% of the vote in the August 14, 2018, Republican primary despite the controversies, indicating a niche base viewing his advocacy as a legitimate counter to perceived anti-white policies.[60] Even within alt-right circles, support waned; Gab banned him in April 2018 for doxxing, with some activists deeming his tactics overly provocative.[66]Media and Organizational Criticisms
The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a Jewish advocacy organization, criticized Paul Nehlen on January 24, 2018, for promoting anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, including claims about Jewish control over media and government, alongside unapologetically racist statements targeting Muslims and immigrants.[8] The ADL highlighted specific posts where Nehlen endorsed white nationalist rhetoric and questioned Holocaust narratives, framing these as part of a broader pattern of extremism that disqualified him from mainstream politics.[8] The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which monitors domestic extremism but has faced accusations of partisan overreach in labeling conservative figures, profiled Nehlen as a leading white supremacist advocate who evolved from political challenger to promoter of violence against perceived enemies.[9] In its assessment, the SPLC cited Nehlen's endorsements of terrorism against media figures and his alignment with alt-right ideologies as evidence of his role in mainstreaming hate, particularly after his 2018 primary loss where he garnered 11% of the Republican vote despite widespread repudiation.[9][60] Mainstream media outlets, including Newsweek and The Washington Post, condemned Nehlen's January 30, 2018, tweet listing 81 critics with 74 identified as Jewish, interpreting it as an anti-Semitic trope invoking dual loyalty and media conspiracies.[62] Similarly, on February 12, 2018, The Washington Post and NPR labeled Nehlen's tweet mocking Meghan Markle with an image of prehistoric "Cheddar Man" as racist, emphasizing its implication of racial inferiority tied to her heritage, which prompted his Twitter suspension.[68][10] Al Jazeera and CNN further portrayed Nehlen as part of a rising white supremacist infiltration in Republican primaries, linking his rhetoric to events like the 2017 Charlottesville rally.[81][82] These criticisms often aligned with organizational narratives from groups like the ADL, reflecting a consensus among left-leaning media that Nehlen's views represented unacceptable extremism, though such outlets have been noted for selective outrage toward right-wing figures.Defenses and Supporter Perspectives
Nehlen's early supporters, including Donald Trump and Steve Bannon, praised his 2016 primary challenge to Paul Ryan as embodying an "America First" agenda focused on trade protectionism, immigration restriction, and opposition to H1B visa expansions that they argued displaced American workers.[45][83] Trump specifically thanked Nehlen on Twitter for supportive remarks, positioning him as a viable alternative to establishment Republicans seen as insufficiently committed to national sovereignty.[45] In his book Wage the Battle: Putting America First in the Fight to Stop Globalist Politicians and Secure the Borders, Nehlen frames his campaigns as a defense of American economic interests against elite policies favoring cheap foreign labor and open borders, citing specific examples like manufacturing job losses tied to trade deals and visa programs. Supporters within nationalist circles echoed this, viewing his platform evolution as a logical extension of data-driven critiques of demographic shifts and labor market competition, rather than unfounded prejudice.[84] Following platform bans, figures like Laura Ingraham described Nehlen as a "prominent voice censored by Big Tech," implying his exclusion from mainstream discourse stemmed from challenging dominant narratives on immigration and identity rather than inherent bigotry.[85] Endorsements from individuals such as Corey Stewart, who called Nehlen a "personal hero," reinforced perceptions among backers that accusations of racism and anti-Semitism were smears deployed by institutional critics to marginalize advocates for explicit white American interests.[86] These perspectives hold that Nehlen's statements on ethnic influence in media and policy—such as compiling lists of critics to highlight patterns—represent empirical observations suppressed under the guise of hate speech prohibitions.[50] Nationalist online communities, including those on alternative platforms like Gab where Nehlen maintained a presence post-bans, defended his rhetoric as a necessary counter to what they term anti-white discrimination in public policy and cultural institutions, arguing that mainstream media and organizations like the ADL exhibit selective outrage driven by ideological bias.[8] They contend his endorsements of works critiquing group evolutionary strategies, such as Kevin MacDonald's The Culture of Critique, foster legitimate debate on historical power dynamics, not baseless hatred, and that deplatforming validates claims of coordinated suppression.[87]Personal Life
Family and Relationships
Paul Nehlen is married to Gabriela Lira.[88][89] Between July 2017 and April 2018, Nehlen's congressional campaign made 26 payments to Lira totaling $37,870 for consulting and administrative services.[88][90] Lira serves as vice president of Aqua Revival, a company founded by Nehlen.[91] Public records provide no further details on prior marriages or children.Post-Political Activities
Following his defeat in the August 14, 2018, Republican primary for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district, Nehlen shifted his focus from electoral politics to online engagement on alternative platforms, including Telegram and white nationalist podcasts, where he expressed support for violent actors and promoted accelerationist ideologies aimed at precipitating societal collapse through terrorism. On April 18, 2019, during an appearance on the "Goy Talk" podcast, Nehlen praised Robert Bowers, the perpetrator of the October 27, 2018, Pittsburgh synagogue shooting that killed 11 people, stating, “I’m not opposed to someone … leading a million Robert Bowers to the promised land.”[92] Eleven days later, on the "The Gas Station" podcast, he celebrated John Earnest, responsible for the April 27, 2019, Poway synagogue shooting that injured one and killed one, declaring, “I’m not backing away from this kid. I’m heralding his arrival.”[92] These statements aligned with Nehlen's endorsement of Siege, a 1980s neo-Nazi manifesto by James Mason advocating leaderless, decentralized terrorist acts to hasten racial conflict; on May 9, 2019, he announced on Telegram his intent to record an audiobook of the text. Nehlen also targeted Jewish individuals in media, posting on Telegram on June 4, 2019, a list of purported Jewish executives and journalists, accompanied by inflammatory rhetoric such as, on May 15, 2019, “Hey k—- I’ve got a message for you: get fukd. [Day of the Rope] real soon,” referencing a fictional mass execution scenario from neo-Nazi literature. He associated with groups like the "Bowl Gang" on Telegram, feuding publicly with other extremists over tactics for initiating race war, as documented in exchanges from April 2019.[93] These activities drew scrutiny from watchdogs like the Southern Poverty Law Center, which characterized Nehlen as a prominent advocate for terrorism, though such organizations have faced criticism for broad labeling of nationalist figures. By 2025, Nehlen's public profile in extremist circles appeared diminished, with no recorded federal campaign filings or major political runs since 2018.[94] He maintained a professional presence as President of AquaRevival, a company specializing in aquatic filtration systems, as indicated in his LinkedIn activity from May 2025.[2] No verified publications or books authored post-2018 were identified beyond his earlier campaign-era work, Wage the Battle: Putting America First (2016).[95]Electoral Results
2016 Primary Outcomes
In the Republican primary election held on August 9, 2016, for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district, incumbent U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan defeated challenger Paul Nehlen with 84% of the vote to Nehlen's 16%.[96] Ryan received approximately 68,584 votes, while Nehlen garnered 13,097, in a contest that saw low overall turnout typical for primaries. The district, encompassing southeastern Wisconsin including Racine and Kenosha counties, favored Ryan's established incumbency and institutional support within the party.[5] Nehlen, a manufacturing executive entering politics for the first time, campaigned on themes of trade protectionism and immigration restriction, positioning himself as an outsider aligned with Donald Trump's presidential bid.[97] Trump endorsed Nehlen via Twitter on August 2, 2016, praising his stance on immigration, but the late support failed to shift voter preferences significantly.[98] Ryan, who had temporarily stepped down from Speaker duties earlier that summer amid party infighting, framed the race as a referendum on steady leadership, bolstered by endorsements from local Republican organizations and substantial fundraising advantages—over $9 million in cash on hand compared to Nehlen's resources.[99] The outcome underscored Ryan's strong local base, with Nehlen's performance falling short of expectations despite national media attention and online buzz from Trump supporters.[100] Post-election analyses noted the lopsided result as evidence of limited appetite among district Republicans for a full-throated Trump-style insurgency at that stage, though Nehlen viewed the 16% share as a foundation for future challenges.[101] Ryan advanced unopposed in the general election, securing reelection with 69% against Democrat Ryan Solen.[102]2018 Primary Outcomes
In the Republican primary election for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district on August 14, 2018, Paul Nehlen secured third place with 6,638 votes, equivalent to 11.1% of the total.) The primary followed incumbent Paul Ryan's April 11, 2018, announcement that he would not seek re-election after serving since 1999.[103] Nehlen's vote share reflected support from a niche segment of voters aligned with his immigration restrictionist and nationalist positions, despite his prior disavowal by the Wisconsin Republican Party in February 2018 amid controversies over social media activity.[104] Bryan Steil, a businessman and University of Wisconsin regent endorsed by Ryan and national GOP figures, won the nomination with 30,885 votes (51.6%), advancing to defeat Democrat Randy Bryce in the general election.) The field included five other candidates, with a total of 59,883 votes cast.)| Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Bryan Steil | 30,885 | 51.6% |
| Nick Polce | 8,948 | 14.9% |
| Paul Nehlen | 6,638 | 11.1% |
| Kevin Adam Steen | 6,262 | 10.5% |
| Jeremy Ryan | 6,226 | 10.4% |
| Bradley Thomas Boivin | 924 | 1.5% |