Rockford Institute Explained

Rockford Institute
Founder:John A. Howard
Founding Location:Rockford, IL
Named After:Rockford College
Purpose:cultural advocacy
Type:nonprofit
Status:501(c)(3)
Tax Id:36-3062112
Budget:Revenue: $467,026
Expenses: $1,148,857
(FYE June 2016)[1]
Headquarters:
Merged:Charlemagne Institute
Successor:Charlemagne Institute

The Rockford Institute was an American conservative think-tank associated with paleoconservatism, based in Rockford, Illinois.[2] Founded in 1976, it ran the John Randolph Club[3] and published the magazine Chronicles. In 2018 the Rockford Institute merged with the Charlemagne Institute (renamed from Intellectual Takeout in 2018), which became the new publisher of Chronicles.[4] The Charlemagne Institute describes itself as "leading a cultural movement to defend and advance Western Civilization, the foundation of our American republic."[5]

Chronicles, the Rockford Institute, and since 2018 the Charlemagne Institute have been described as central to the paleoconservative intellectual movement.[6] Chronicles peaked in the 1990s[7] and helped shape the paleoconservative revival that accompanied Patrick Buchanan's 1992 and 1996 presidential campaigns.[8] At its peak, it had 15,000 subscribers.[7] As of September 2016 there were 6,700 subscribers.[9]

History

The Rockford Institute was founded in 1976 by Rockford College president John A. Howard as a response to American social changes of the 1960s. Allan Carlson served as president until 1997. He and Howard left to found The Howard Center for Family, Religion and Society which opposes abortion, divorce, and homosexuality, promoting instead the "child-rich, married parent" family,[10] an offshoot of the Rockford Institute.[2] It was located in Rockford, Illinois.

Thomas Fleming, editor of Chronicles, succeeded Carlson as president of the Rockford Institute. The institute also retained the Ingersoll Prize,[2] which the Rockford Institute had established in 1983 to honor conservative thinkers.[11] Fleming, a founding member of the League of the South, was described as a neo-Confederate by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).[12]

In 1988 the institute and Richard John Neuhaus, a Lutheran pastor, invited Cardinal Ratzinger to give a lecture in New York in January.[13] On 5 May 1989 Neuhaus and his Religion and Society Center were evicted from the institute's New York office after he complained about what he said were "the racist and anti-Semitic tones" of Chronicles.[2] [14] The charge, which was supported by other leading conservatives, was denied by the institute.[15] They said the office, called Rockford East, was closed for budgetary reasons and because of concerns that Neuhaus was not following institute policies.[15] The split was seen by leading conservatives as a sign of the division between the paleoconservative and the neo-conservative elements of the movement.[16] [17]

John Randolph Club

The John Randolph Club (1989–1995) was a project of the Rockford Institute to promote alliances between paleoconservatives and paleolibertarians.[18] The club has been described as neo-Confederate, promoting secession, and favoring white Southerners.[19] Founding members included the radical libertarian Murray Rothbard, Jared Taylor of the white nationalist journal American Renaissance, the white nationalist Peter Brimelow, the writer Samuel Francis, and the journalist and politician Pat Buchanan. It was named for John Randolph (described by the historian Quinn Slobodian as "a slaveholder whose catchphrase was 'I love liberty, I hate equality'"). Chronicles promoted the club's activities.

Merger and renaming

In 2018 the Rockford Institute merged with the Charlemagne Institute (renamed from Intellectual Takeout in 2018), which became the new publisher of Chronicles. Devin C. Foley is listed as the Charlemagne Institute's chief executive officer.[20]

Chronicles magazine

Chronicles is a U.S. monthly magazine published by the Rockford Institute. Its full current name is Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture. The magazine is known for promoting anti-globalism, anti-intervention, and anti-immigration stances within conservative politics, and is considered one of the leading paleoconservative publications.[21] [22]

, the executive editor was Aaron D. Wolf[23] and,, Srđa Trifković was editor for foreign affairs.[24] Contributors over the years have included the conservative activist Peter Gemma.[25], its website names Paul Gottfried as its Interim Editor-in-Chief and Edmund Welsch as Executive Editor, and was hosted by (and listed as a programme of) the Charlemagne Institute.[26]

In 2000, James Warren of The Chicago Tribune called Chronicles "right-leaning" and wrote, "There are few publications more cerebral". He described a Chronicles article criticizing the finances of Donald Trump, who was then considering a Reform Party presidential campaign.[27]

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) described Chronicles in 2017 as "a publication with strong neo-Confederate ties that caters to the more intellectual wing of the white nationalist movement",[28] and in another article said it was "controversial even among conservatives for its racism and anti-Semitism".[29]

Editors

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Rockford Institute . Foundation Center . 7 March 2019.
  2. News: Rockford Institute chief leaves to form his own think tank. Julia . Duin. Washington Times. 1997-12-10. A.2 .
  3. Web site: Paleoconservatives' Decry Immigration. Southern Poverty Law Center. 3 March 2012. Heidi Beirich. Mark Potok . Winter 2003.
  4. News: Mission and Vision – History . Charlemagne Institute . Bloomington, Minnesota . 2023-04-16.
  5. Web site: Charlemagne Institute Defending & Advancing Western Civilization . Charlemagne Institute . 19 January 2022 . en.
  6. Book: The right and radical right in the Americas: ideological currents from interwar Canada to contemporary Chile . 2022 . Lexington Books . 978-1-7936-3583-9 . Bar-On . Tamir . Lanham Boulder New York London . 165 . Molas . Bàrbara.
  7. E. Christian Kopff. Chronicles. First Principles. 3 September 2010.
  8. News: Blumenthal. Max. Sen. John Cornyn Meets the Racist Right. The Huffington Post. 2006-09-20 . 2011-05-25. 2021-06-17.
  9. Chronicles, Statement of Ownership, November, 2016, p. 7
  10. News: Corbett aide who edited journal quits. Columbius. Angela. 2012-01-18. Philadelphia Inquirer. 2018-06-19. A4. en.
  11. News: Suplee . Curt . 1984-08-29 . Powell, Kirk Win Ingersoll Prizes . en-US . Washington Post . 2023-06-05 . 0190-8286.
  12. Web site: Piggott . Stephen . January 26, 2016 . "Mainstream" Conservatives With Large Audiences Promote White Nationalists . 2023-06-06 . . en.
  13. News: PROMOTER OF THE DOCTRINE VATICAN'S CARDINAL RATZINGER DEALS WITH DOGMA AND DISPUTES IN US VISIT. James L. . Franklin. Boston Globe. 1988-02-01. 2.
  14. News: Father Richard Neuhaus; Vocal US Lutheran pastor and civil rights activist who became a leading Catholic conservative commentator. The Times. London (UK). 2009-01-16. 75.
  15. News: Magazine Dispute Reflects Rift on U.S. Right. BERNSTEIN. RICHARD. New York Times. 1989-05-16. A.1.
  16. News: Cultural Clash on the Right. David . Frum. Wall Street Journal. 1989-06-02. 1.
  17. Tabachnick . Rachel . Cocozzelli . Frank L. . Fall 2013 . Nullification, Neo-Confederates, and the Revenge of the Old Right. . Public Eye . 2–8.
  18. Web site: Slobodian . Quinn . Anti-'68ers and the Racist-Libertarian Alliance: How a Schism among Austrian School Neoliberals Helped Spawn the Alt Right . 2021-03-17.
  19. Book: Slobodian, Quinn . Crack-up capitalism: market radicals and the dream of a world without democracy . 2023 . Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Company . 978-1-250-75390-8 . First . New York.
  20. Web site: 2021-02-28 . Who We Are – About . unfit . https://web.archive.org/web/20210228052538/https://www.charlemagneinstitute.org/about/who-we-are/ . 2021-02-28 . 2021-05-19 . Charlemagne Institute.
  21. PaleoConservatives: New Voices of the Old Right, by Joseph Scotchie, pgs. 1 – 75.
  22. Web site: Francis . Samuel . 2002-12-16 . The Paleo Persuasion . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120406100307/http://www.theamericanconservative.com/article/2002/dec/16/00025/ . 2012-04-06 . The American Conservative.
  23. "Chronicles", June 2017, p. 3
  24. Chronicles, September 2012, p. 4.
  25. Web site: The Council for National Policy: Selected Member Biographies, Peter B. Gemma, Jr. . 2016-05-23 . seekgod.ca . 9 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160309194817/http://www.seekgod.ca/cnp.g.htm#gemma . dead .
  26. Web site: 2021-05-06 . About Us – About . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210506213631/https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/about/ . 2021-05-06 . 2021-05-19 . Chronicles.
  27. [James Warren (journalist)|James Warren]
  28. Web site: Meet Jessica Vaughan, the anti-immigrant movement's representative at tomorrow's Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing on DACA . 2023-06-05 . Southern Poverty Law Center . en.
  29. Web site: Garrett Hardin . 2023-06-05 . Southern Poverty Law Center . en.
  30. Web site: Leopold Tyrmand, 64, Editor Who Emigrated From Poland . The New York Times. 1985-03-22 . 2015-01-19 . Obituary .
  31. http://www.firstprinciplesjournal.com/articles.aspx?article=1059&theme=home&page=1&loc=b&type=cttf/ "A brief history of Chronicles" by E. Christian Kopff