Posted on June 26, 2025

Trump Doesn’t Speak for Us

Jared Taylor, American Renaissance, June 26, 2025

We’ll speak for ourselves.


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Just a few days ago, the major Danish paper B.T. wrote an editorial about immigrants: “They should not be integrated. They should go home.”

The paper pointed out that Danes are on course to become a minority in their own country by 2096. It added: “It is simply not acceptable . . . . That is why remigration is necessary.”

Send the foreigners home. Danes can disagree on other policies, it said, but everyone must agree that Denmark is for the Danes.

What could be more obvious?

The remigration movement is growing. Here are Spaniards marching for remigration.

Credit Image: © Angel Perez/ZUMA Press Wire

Italians are calling for remigration.

The Dutch activist Eva Vlaardingerbroek promoted remigration at this year’s CPAC Hungary.

Even in the most beaten-down country in the world, Germany, people march for remigration.

Credit Image: © Roberto Pfeil/dpa via ZUMA Press

Europeans need homelands.

I have spent 35 years saying the same thing about the United States. We need a homeland.

When Donald Trump was elected in 2016, I thought that in an offhand remark to reporters he might — just might — say, “What’s wrong with white people wanting to be the majority in the United States?”

I no longer think he has it in him. In this year’s inaugural address, he mentioned support from “African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans.” He went on to say, “To the Black and Hispanic communities, I want to thank you.”

Mr. Trump got 80 percent of his 77 million votes from white people, but he didn’t mention us once.

I don’t think a guy who is 79 years old and still doesn’t understand race ever will.

There are more than 519,000 elected officials in the United States.

I don’t know of a single one who says what that Danish newspaper said about Danes: That we need a place where we are the majority. And yet, every year, millions more people come to understand what’s necessary for our survival.

Why do we have no political representation — not even on a city council or a school board?

In 1989, before a lot of you were even born, David Duke won a seat in the Louisiana state house.

He ran as a Republican and won despite denunciations from the then-President George H. W. Bush and former president Ronald Reagan. Mr. Duke was the most famous “racist” in America.

He even wore a swastika armband as a student at Louisiana State University.

But he had a well-packaged, pro-white message that got through to the people of Metairie, Louisiana — Republican, Democrat, and independent.

Credit Image: © Jerry Mennenga/ZUMA Press Wire

You couldn’t have had more awkward baggage than David Duke, but he won.

I remember reading the news in the New York Times, and thinking, “This is the big breakthrough. The floodgates have opened.”

Boy, was I wrong. There’s hardly been a trickle. In the 1990s, white advocate Frank Borzellieri was elected several times to the school board in Queens, New York, of all places. He made headlines by denouncing anti-white propaganda, calling the NAACP a “liberal freak organization” and saying it was outrageous to canonize a “plagiarist, embezzler, [and] adulterer” named Martin Luther King.

He spoke at several American Renaissance conferences and became the most famous school board member in the whole country. Mr. Borzellieri was knocked off the board only because New York City public schools reorganized into a single city-wide school board. In 1997, Mr. Borzellieri ran for city council in a hard-fought race that he lost after being outspent seven to one.

Yes, it’s tough battling the machine, but if you can get that far in New York City, for heaven’s sake, think how far you could go in Tennessee, Arkansas, Nebraska, Utah—plenty of places.

Why do we still have no voice, despite Donald Trump, despite the rise of the Alt Right, despite the pro-white organizations and personalities that appear all the time?

I think there are two reasons. One is the idea that the system is so rotten that electoral politics can change nothing. The other is the idea that there has to be complete collapse, and then white consciousness will grow out of the ruins.

Wrong on both counts. Electing Donald Trump rather than Kamala Harris wasn’t a permanent cure, but it made a huge difference. We don’t even know how many tens of millions of illegals Joe Biden let in, but immigration is now so low some people think this year could be the first net outflow in decades.

Credit Image: © Xin Yuewei/Xinhua via ZUMA Press

Obviously, the presidential election is the most important one, but imagine the tremendous impact of a hundred David Dukes or Frank Borzellieris.

Credit Image: © Jerry Mennenga/ZUMA Press Wire

As for collapse, it might never come, and even if it did, there’s no guarantee it would do any good. Greece’s debt crisis lasted a decade. Argentina had 54 percent inflation in 2019, and in 2020 it had its ninth debt default, GDP shrank 10 percent, and the poverty rate—in a country whiter than the United States — was 41 percent.

Credit Image: © Roberto Almeida Aveledo/ZUMA Wire

There was no miraculous blossoming of white consciousness in either country.

Credit Image: © Roberto Almeida Aveledo/ZUMA Wire

I think too many people are looking for excuses to do nothing.

Yes, running for office is very hard work, unlike complaining on X. But for anything to change, white people will have to work very, very hard. It takes power to change things, and power comes from politics.

Everywhere I go, I meet smart, committed young people.

Some of them will run for office. They’ll do it in the right places, with the right message. And when they do, campaign money will pour in from all over the country. And when they win, the media will squeal, but things will begin to change.

I don’t often paraphrase Karl Marx, but I will today: White people of the world, unite! You have nothing to lose but your chains.