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Tea Party Senate Candidates Court Favor Of Extreme Anti-Immigrant Group ALIPAC

Americans for Legal Immigration PAC (ALIPAC) may be the fringe operation of a lone anti-immigrant extremist, but hasn’t stopped two Tea Party-backed US Senate candidates from filling out the group’s unhinged candidate survey and seeking its endorsement.

ALIPAC’s president (and sole employee) William Gheen announced today(link is external) that his group is endorsing Matt Bevin in his bid to unseat Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in Kentucky and Rob Maness, one of several Republicans running to take on Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu in Louisiana.

Both(link is external) candidates(link is external) won the “honor” by filling out Gheen’s one-question candidate survey,(link is external) which asks candidates to choose between “Support[ing] Americans and legal immigrants by support the adequate enforcement of America's existing border and immigration laws as the US Constitution requires” and “Supporting illegal aliens and their supporters by supporting changing existing laws to accommodate millions of illegal immigrants through 'immigration reform' amnesty.”

Current members of Congress who have sought ALIPAC’s endorsement in previous years by filling out Gheen’s survey(link is external) include Mo Brooks, Dennis Ross, Austin Scott, Walter Jones, Patrick McHenry, Tom Marino, Lou Barletta, Joe Wilson, Diane Black, Marsha Blackburn, Kenny Marchant and Morgan Griffith.

The attention GOP candidates are giving ALIPAC is especially alarming considering that the group is basically the work of one anti-immigrant extremist that always seems one small donation short of total collapse.

Every three months, like clockwork, Gheen sends out a series of increasingly(link is external) desperate(link is external) emails(link is external) begging his supporters for cash, berating them(link is external) for insufficient commitment to the cause, and threatening to shut down(link is external) his operation if he doesn’t get a certain amount of money by a certain time.

And then, every quarter, he manages to raise just enough to keep on going, appearing in conservative media to push his unabashedly racist anti-immigrant message, warning that an immigrant “invasion(link is external)” will undermine the ability(link is external) of “ traditional Americans(link is external)” to rule the country, something that he thinks may need to be stopped by “ illegal and violent(link is external)” means and an anti-Obama coup(link is external).

But despite Gheen’s boast(link is external) that his group “put the brakes on Boehner’s immigration reform push” and his assumption that members of Congress cower in fear of losing his endorsement(link is external) and being put on his “traitors” list, his organization appears to be running on fumes.

ALIPAC is organized as a political action committee, but according to records on OpenSecrets.org, the group hasn’t contributed to a federal candidate or made an independent expenditure since 2010, when it contributed(link is external) $2,000 to former congressman J.D. Hayworth’s primary challenge to Sen. John McCain in Arizona, spent another $3,248(link is external) in independent expenditures in the race. That year, Gheen’s group also gave small contributions(link is external) to Tea Party candidates including Sharron Angle in Nevada and Joe Walsh in Illinois. ALIPAC’s spending on behalf of Hayworth’s losing campaign was its most serious election effort since Gheen founded the group in 2004.

In the 2012 election cycle and so far in the current election cycle,most of the organization’s funds(link is external) have gone toward Gheen’s salary(link is external); the rest have been administrative and fundraising expenses, with a few thousand dollars spent on “web ads.”

Gheen’s reports to the FEC give us an idea of who is base is: Among ALIPAC’s largest donors is Elizabeth Van Staaveren, cofounder of Oregonians for Immigration Reform, which the Southern Poverty Law Center has designated as a “ nativist extremist group(link is external)”; and a handful of anti-immigrant activists who lurk in online(link is external)comment(link is external) sections(link is external).

Gheen regularly exaggerates ALIPAC’s reach and impact. For instance, despite claiming(link is external) that his Facebook page reaches 195,000 people and that his(link is external) “effort to circulate social media pictures of Boehner and Obama together” made all the difference in the immigration debate, the picture in question was shared a whopping 14 times(link is external) on Facebook.

This is all on top of the fact that Gheen doesn’t exactly come across as a serious policy thinker. He keeps a Pinterest page where he postsracist(link is external), homophobic(link is external) and just plain(link is external) bizarre(link is external) images and he started a Facebook page called “Mark zuckerberg sucks(link is external).” Gheen’s most recent project was the launch of a weird anti-immigrant “encyclopedia.”(link is external)

Despite the fact that his organization struggles every quarter to stay open, as well as the fact that he hasn’t been active in a federal election for four years, Gheen is still taken seriously in conservative media(link is external), congressional candidates court his endorsement, and his talking points sometimes appear in the mouths of politicians (here’s a video(link is external) of Gheen and Rep. Steve King agreeing about the supposed threat of violence(link is external) from undocumented immigrants).

It says a lot that Gheen, who inhabits the fringe of a fringe movement(link is external), still manages to garner frequent media appearances and even has congressional candidates seeking his endorsement.