Iowa Republicans vote out 'master of racism in Congress' Steve King amid protests for racial justice

Iowa Republicans vote out 'master of racism in Congress' Steve King amid protests for racial justice
Steve King and Ted Cruz, Wikipedia Image
News & Politics

Rep. Steve King, widely known as the most overtly racist member of Congress, was defeated Tuesday in the Republican primary battle for Iowa's 4th District.


Challenger Randy Feenstra, a state senator, officially beat King by a margin of 36,797 votes to 28,977 with 100% of precincts reporting, according to The New York Times. Feenstra, who won by a margin of just under 10 points, will go on to face Democrat J.D. Scholten in November.

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King, who was stripped of his committee assignments after expressing sympathy for white nationalists and white supremacists, later denounced the ideologies. But King already had a long and established history of racist comments under his belt.

The congressman's lost came amid historic protests from coast to coast for racial equality following the death of unarmed black man George Floyd while in the custody of Minneapolis police. And the timing did not go unnoticed by political commentators.

"For Rep Steve King, master of racism in Congress, to lose his GOP primary tonight, seems somehow fitting?" MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell tweeted after the race was called.

King's loss was cheered by both sides of the political aisle, including freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. Known by her initials, AOC was voted into the most diverse Congress ever.

"Goodbye, Rep. Steve King. You are certainly not the only white supremacist in federal government, but you were among the most prominent," she tweeted. "It's a shame Republicans held you up as long as they did."

Meghan McCain, the daughter of former Republican presidential candidate John McCain who sits in the conservative seat on "The View," also did not mince words.

"Don't let the door hit your ass on the way out," she wrote on Twitter.

King's fate was sealed as Republican President Donald Trump faced mounting criticism after police backed by the National Guard unleashed tear gas, rubber bullets and flash-bang shells on peaceful protesters to clear a path for him to have his photo taken holding a Bible in front of historic St. John's Episcopal Church.

The congressman was universally panned after he questioned criticisms of terms used to identify white racists.

"White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization — how did that language become offensive? Why did I sit in classes teaching me about the merits of our history and our civilization?" King asked during a controversial interview with The Times in January 2019.

But King was only stripped of his committee assignments last year after questioning whether there would "be any population of the world left" without rape or incest. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., had called for his resignation. As King's influence deteriorated, his campaign chest also dried out amid struggles to attract donors.

King has also been criticized for bragging that water from a sink attached to a toilet at a migrant detention tasted "pretty good" amid a national outcry over squalid conditions at the centers. He once joked about imprisoned Muslims who were forced to eat pork in China.

In additions to his comments about white supremacy, King previously said that "our civilization" can't be restored with "somebody else's babies." He also predicted that "Hispanics and the blacks will be fighting each other" before non-whites outnumber whites, as well as speculated that more blacks could afford abortions if they stopped buying iPhones.

Salon's Matthew Rozsa contributed to this report. 

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