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Spencer married Nina Kouprianova in 2010, with whom he has two children. [168] He separated from Kouprianova, a Russian-Canadian with Georgian roots, [ 169 ] in October 2016; [ 40 ] in April 2017, Spencer said he and his wife were not separated and were still together.
Richard B. Spencer, President (2011–) The National Policy Institute ( NPI ) was a white supremacist think tank and lobbying group based in Alexandria, Virginia . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It lobbied for white supremacists and the alt-right . [ 4 ]
In September 2017, AltRight Corporation co-founder Jason Jorjani claimed that in 2016, funders "very close" to then-presidential candidate Donald Trump, had offered him funding to "infiltrate" the alt-right, with the intention of convincing its leaders to drop their white nationalism rhetoric, and move away from race-based politics, and this is the reason he affiliated himself with Spencer and ...
We live in a golden age of historical fiction, from Colson Whitehead’s “The Underground Railroad,” adapted for television by Barry Jenkins, to Mark Sullivan’s bestseller “Beneath a ...
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Before Spencer, the company was run by Louis Andrews. He was also director of the National Policy Institute and managing editor of The Occidental Quarterly, both heavily funded by William Regnery II. [citation needed] In 2013, the company was listed as being headquartered in Whitefish, Montana. [2] As of 2019, the company had moved to Augusta ...
Last month, an inquest into Richard Spencer’s death found that he also died of a lung injury, as well as nearly drowning in the car. Hours after the accident, Phil, 53, shared that his parents ...
In 2011, he hired Richard B. Spencer to run it. [3] Spencer helped to organize the 2017 " Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. James Alex Fields Jr. ran his car into a group of counter-protesters there, killing Heather Heyer and leading to a judgment of $2.4 million against the Institute. [ 12 ]