How Nick Fuentes Is Charming the Left
Nick Fuentesâs Strategy is Working
Viral clips of the far-right white supremacist are growing his audience.
Nick Fuentes, a 27-year-old white-supremacist influencer, is notorious for a political outlook that he summarizes succinctly: âJews are running society, women need to shut the fuck up, Blacks need to be imprisoned, for the most part.â For Ericson Contreras, a left-leaning 23-year-old Afro Hispanic man from New York, Fuentes is not a natural ideological guru. So when Contreras was scrolling Instagram at 3 a.m. recently, he was surprised to find himself served a clip of a Fuentes monologue. More surprising still, Contreras was nodding along.
âTrump is better than the Democrats for Israel. For the oil and gas industry. For Silicon Valley. For Wall Street. Is he really better for us? I donât think so,â Fuentes declared while gazing at the camera in one of these fan-uploaded clips. âBiden made it so that medical debt doesnât go on your credit reportâthat was good for me. Biden tried to forgive the student loansâthat was good for me.â Retouched in a tasteful black and white, the video featured an orchestral soundtrack that crescendoed as the fast-talking, besuited polemicist delivered his final punch: âThe free market says that Republicans have enough money to bomb Iran but not enough money to pay for my student loans. And Iâm going to vote for that âcause Iâm an idiot.â
Fuentesâs economic populism resonated with Contreras. âIâm like, Yâknow, he kinda has a point,â Contreras told me. He flicked through more Fuentes reels and was impressed to find jabs at President Trump, Vice President Vance, and other leading conservatives, as well as a full-throated takedown of Americaâs attack on Iran, which has moved Fuentes to encourage voters to back Democrats in the midterms: âWe need, in 2026, for this administration to be shut. The fuck. Down.â Contreras admitted, however, that finding common ground with a self-proclaimed racist can be disorienting: âI get mad because I agree with him.â
There is increasing concern on the left and in parts of the MAGA right about the rise of Groypers, a term for the growing number of people, most of them conservative young men, who follow Fuentes, a man who has denied the Holocaust, defended Jim Crow, and argued that women should be denied the vote and that many of them âwant to be raped.â But Fuentes also appears to be gaining a following on the left. Thanks to an army of fans bent on broadening his audience, clips of Fuentes sounding well mannered and oddly agreeable now regularly go viral on the very social-media platforms that have officially banned him for his hate speech and anti-Semitism. The clip in which Fuentes praises Joe Biden, for example, has more than 5 million views.
Many left-wing social-media users are as mistrustful of mainstream-media outlets as Fuentesâs usual fans, which may prime them to reconsider a figure the usual gatekeepers have dismissed. People on the outer edges of the political spectrum also tend to share anti-elitist, anti-establishment views, which can shade into the hatreds that Fuentes is so skilled at tapping.
Yet if some of Fuentesâs leftist converts are the by-product of horseshoe politics, others seem a product of the peculiar new mechanics of social media. His show, America First With Nicholas J. Fuentes, streams for hours every weeknight on Rumble, but few of the converts I spoke with had ever watched it. They had, instead, encountered Fuentes through brief, selectively edited videos that cropped up in their feeds. Social-media âclippersâ rely on algorithms to circulate the cherry-picked content they post, which is how these videos are reaching people who, like Contreras, are bewildered to find themselves agreeing with a man who once said, âMy problem with Trump isnât that heâs Hitler. My problem with Trump is that he is not Hitler.â (Fuentes did not respond to multiple requests for comment.)
Cut from his show, these snippets handily capture Fuentesâs appeal to his followersâhis charisma, humor, and willingness to throw punchesâwhile leaving out most of the racism and misogyny that might trigger censors or alienate viewers. In many clips, Fuentes channels his anti-Semitism into criticisms of Israel that may resonate with young progressives. The Fuentes in these videos, which have been appearing in my feeds, too, is an ideological chameleon. In one, he decries âthe MAGA movement as the biggest scam in American historyâ; in another, he derides neo-Nazis for lionizing âa racial supremacist,â adding: âIf Hitler had it his way, they wouldâve killed and enslaved millions of people. Like, what the fuck are you talking about?â
Other progressives have expressed similar surprise in finding themselves charmed by this deceptively scrubbed-up Fuentes during their late-night scrolls. As a 23-year-old Jewish anti-Zionist leftist from New York told me, âHe could be your homie.â (A number of sources declined to be identified to avoid professional blowback or harassment for praising Fuentes.)
âFinally getting it Nick,â former Representative Jamaal Bowman commented on the viral clip of Fuentes praising Biden. A New York Democrat who ran on taxing the rich and defunding the police, Bowman added, âItâs us, against the oligarchy. Now no more racist bullshit from you.â
TikTok, YouTube, and Meta all maintain bans on official accounts belonging to Fuentes. These companies told me that they prohibit hate speech and remove it when they can. Yet most social-media platforms have loosened moderation standards since Trumpâs reelection in 2024, and they are clearly unable to keep up with all of the fan-uploaded clips. In response to questions about the videos I was seeing in my feeds, Meta asked for the relevant links on Instagram, which Meta owns, and promptly erased them for violating their guidelines. Within minutes, I found identical clips on Instagram.
Because Fuentesâs monologues tend to rattle on for hours without focus or consistency, clippers have little trouble finding messages that appeal to different users. âYou can show 90 seconds to one person, and 90 seconds to someone else, and 90 seconds to a third person. Each of those people will say, Yeah, I agree with that,â Laura Edelson, a Northeastern University professor who studies online extremism, told me. She added that social-media algorithms amplify these clips by using speech-to-text transcriptions to group similar content together. So leftists who âlikeâ videos that praise student-loan forgiveness and criticize MAGA may find themselves served with a snippet of Fuentes making similar points.
Clippers can further game social-media algorithms by adding left-wing hashtags, such as #liberal and #lgbtq, to their captions. Instagram served me one video of Fuentes expressing admiration for Stalin over a caption that read: âđ his silliness knows no bounds (hashtags bc i want left wing ppl to react to this so im seeing if i can bait them into watching this clips)â and included #marxism, #leftist, and #anticapitalist. Unlike TikTok and Instagram, YouTube lets users manipulate algorithms with back-end tags, too, which viewers donât see.
One 21-year-old Christian nationalist who runs the @womenforfuentes fan page on Instagram told me that she spends hours each week carving out clips of his softer, funnier side to better spread his message. Fuentes is âright about everything,â she insisted, citing his takes on immigration, Israel, âneocon foreign politics,â and âthe catastrophic harms of modernity and feminism.â She said that she clips for fun and to make new friends online, but noted with pride that âNick loves his clippers.â He reposts âhis favorite edits,â and once âlikedâ one of her posts on Telegram.
Joan Donovan, a professor at Boston University who studies algorithmic radicalization, told me that Fuentes deliberately makes it easy for clippers to spin his message differently for different demographics. âItâs part of his communication strategy to get algorithms to pick up this content and serve it to wider audiences,â she explained. âFuentes definitely knows that when heâs playing into the left or praising Biden.â
A 24-year-old medical researcher with isolationist views told me that he agreed with a video he saw in January in which Fuentes criticized Americaâs intervention in Venezuela, likening it to the war in Iraqâand âlook at how that turned out,â Fuentes said in the clip. The researcher was shocked when I told him that Fuentes energetically backed the Venezuela attack in another episode, saying: âWe will kill all of you. Our military will come in and wipe out your regime, and weâll take your oil.â
Fuentes claimed in a December 2025 episode that recent moves to embrace more freedom of expression by social-media platforms and a proliferation of fan-uploaded clips may be âthe biggestâ reason why his show blew up last year. Since his return to X in May 2024, Fuentesâs following on the site has grown from less than 300,000 to 1.3 million. âIt used to be the case that if you posted any clip from my show, your whole channel will get deleted,â he said. âAll of a sudden, starting this year, youâre able to post the clip without it getting taken down.â
Some of Fuentesâs fan accounts include a kind of call to action in their Instagram bios: â1,000 clippers > 10 news outlets,â meaning they believe that their aggregate work in disseminating his message reaches more viewers than anything that might run in a prime-time broadcast.
Snippets that intentionally soften or distort Fuentesâs views to appeal to more users worry researchers who study radicalization online. âPartial, agreeable exposure lowers friction,â Don Shin, a professor at Texas Tech University, told me. âThat makes people more likely to watch another clip, click through to a full stream, or simply stop actively avoiding the creatorâwhich is often the first step toward deeper algorithmic exposure.â
Shin led a 2024 study that found that TikTokâs algorithm gradually radicalized users by nudging them toward incrementally more extreme content. Small actions such as rewatching a clip or scrolling the comments led to more dramatic recommendations to maintain attention, a phenomenon called the âloop effect.â Within a matter of months, participants who experienced constant exposure to certain views began to adopt them.
Videos of the white nationalist that lean into mistrust of the mainstream media have inspired some viewers to make excuses for Fuentesâs more outlandish statements and views. âHe just seems like a normal, funny dude who you would want to have as a friend,â the 23-year-old New Yorker, who voted for Kamala Harris and Zohran Mamdani, told me. This young man said he was entertained by Fuentesâs controversial appearance on the show Piers Morgan Uncensored in Decemberâparticularly when Fuentes responded to a question about his racist commentary by citing his friendship with Kanye âYeâ West, whom Fuentes insisted was untroubled by his use of the N-word. (Ye and Fuentes dined with Trump at Mar-a-Lago in 2022.)
âNick kind of dominated,â the young New Yorker said. âPiers Morgan expected to have a debate or be like: Ha! See, I proved it. Youâre racist.â But, he added, âNick was five steps ahead.â As for clips in which Fuentes used racist slurs and tropes, this young man insisted that they were all a provocative performance, not a sincere expression of beliefs. âA lot of the time, heâll backtrack,â he said. âAll streamers do that. Theyâll clip-farmââsay something outlandish in the hopes of going viralââand then theyâll clarify after.â
A âpretty left-wingâ 17-year-old was similarly inclined to apologize for Fuentes. He told me that the Fuentes in his social-media feed wasnât the âbad guyâ the mainstream media had made him out to be. This teenager said he often found himself agreeing with Fuentes, particularly when the pundit bashed Trump, criticized the political power of wealthy Americans, and lamented the starvation of children in Gazaâall clips the teen shared with friends. As for Fuentesâs description of Hitler as âreally fucking coolâ and his claim that âmass migrationâ to the United States is creating a âwhite genocide,â those were clearly jokes, the teen insisted. âThereâs some stuff he says that, itâs just like, thereâs no way any human believes it. Those I try to just dismiss,â he said. âHeâs just engagement baiting. Heâs trying to get viewers; heâs trying to make money.â
Kurt Gray, a psychology professor at Ohio State University, told me that Fuentesâs appeal to the left might, in part, reflect the theory of âoptimum distinctiveness,â or the inclination of people to differentiate themselves from their group. In this case, lefties watching Fuentes may think: âYeah, Iâm left-wing, but Iâm a free thinker. I listen to Nick Fuentes,â Gray said. âEveryone wants to think of themselves as Neoââthe hero of the Matrix films. âEveryone else is a sheeple.â Gray added that controversy can encourage people to work harder to justify their views, so that someone begins to think, âI must really believe Nick Fuentes because now my sisterâs calling me an idiot for believing him.â
Instead of dismissing Fuentesâs odious views, some of his more recent and ideologically diverse followers contort themselves to justify them. Sure, Fuentes has said, âWe need white men running everything,â but he was just being ironic, right? When he claimed recently that the âNo. 1 political enemy in America is women,â obviously that was for the clicks.
This is what makes Fuentes so successfulâand, to anti-radicalization researchers, so insidious. Heâs relying on the shield of irony and the spear of clipping to win the battle to widen his audience. And itâs working.
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