Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Rep. Steve King Claims He Never Compared Mexican Immigrants To 'Dirt'—But His Own Audio Just Proved Otherwise

Iowa Republican Steve King, who recently won re-election to the House of Representatives despite growing attention for his views that many describe as "white nationalist" or simply "racist," was the subject of a November 6 report by The Weekly Standard, which claimed that King had compared Mexican immigrants to "dirt." King claimed the paper was lying. Fortunately, they had the tapes.


Following the Standard's report, King claimed the story was completely fabricated, saying the paper had joined Huffpost "at the bottom of the lying journalistic gutter. On Twitter, he dared the paper to release the so-called "tapes," saying:

"Just release the full tape. Leftists lies exist without original sources because they are false and manufactured accusations."

Perhaps King thought The Weekly Standard had run the story based on anonymous sources alone. He was sadly mistaken. On Saturday, Editor-in-Chief Stephen Hayes released as statement saying "We stand by the story," and posted this video to YouTube:

Steve King Audioyoutu.be

The recording was made during a campaign stop on November fifth. While King makes small talk with supporters in a restaurant, he begins speaking about his homegrown jalapeño peppers. Things take a far more racist turn from there:

"KING: I raised a bunch this year, and they didn't have enough bite. So I guess I'm going to have to go get some dirt from Mexico to grow the next batch.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Trust me, it's on its way.
KING: Well, yeah, there's plenty of dirt. It's coming from West Coast, too, and a lot of other places, besides. This is the most dirt we've ever seen."




In the words of The Weekly Gazette, which is regarded as a conservative magazine:

"Iowa does have a topsoil depletion problem, but it's hard to imagine that the audience and King were discussing the shipment of soil from out of country or from California."

Twitter was overjoyed that the Gazette called King's bluff:






Sarah Stevens, King's chief of staff, has claimed that King was, in fact, comparing the "leftist media" to dirt, not immigrants. However, an editors note on the Gazette article reads:

"We quoted Representative King at length, on purpose, to provide readers with all of the context for his remarks. Steve King never mentions the media in his remarks. To claim he was referring to the media when he worried about 'dirt' coming from Mexico is absurd."

King's bigoted views are one of the worst-kept secrets in Washington. Last year, on Twitter, he said the following:

"We can't restore our civilization with somebody else's babies."

He later defended that statement to the press. King has also taken interviews with Austria's Freedom Party, "which was founded by a former Nazi officer," wherein he spoke about the "decline of Western civilization" brought on by the replacement of "white Europeans" with immigrants.




Many Congresspeople, even Republicans, have begun distancing themselves from King. His fringe, often derogatory views towards other races have started to gain national notice in the wake of the Pittsburgh Tree of Life Shooting.


Steve King will be up for election in two years, at which point Iowans will once again get the chance to decide whether they want a man who thinks of Mexican immigrants as "dirt" should be representing them in Washington.

H/T - NPR, The Weekly Standard

More from

Brad Pitt
Karwai Tang/WireImage/Getty Images

Brad Pitt Opens Up About Going To Alcoholics Anonymous Amid 'Difficult' Split From Angelina Jolie

In 2016, actors Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt officially separated after 12 years together, with two of those years spent as husband and wife.

The split came after an inflight incident that forced the private plane Pitt, Jolie, and their children were traveling on to make an unscheduled landing and prompted an FBI investigation. Pitt later shared that he was struggling with an alcohol addiction.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sir Rod Stewart; Donald Trump
Ethan Miller/Getty Images; Carlos Barria - Pool/Getty Images

Rod Stewart Explains Why He's No Longer Friends With Trump In Blistering Interview

Singer Sir Rod Stewart and MAGA Republican President Donald Trump might seem like an odd pairing, but the two were once good friends, according to the Grammy winner and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee.

And they actually have several things in common.

Keep ReadingShow less
Thomas Massie; Donald Trump
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Suzanne Plunkett/Pool/Getty Images

GOP Rep. Offers Snarky Clapback After Trump Kicks Him Out Of MAGA For Criticizing Iran Attack

Kentucky Republican Representative Massie offered a snarky response after President Donald Trump said "MAGA doesn't want him" following Massie's criticism of Trump's unilateral decision to bomb Iran and the spending package presented in the "Big Beautiful Bill."

Massie spoke out following Trump's decision to authorize a series of intense U.S. air and submarine strikes targeting three Iranian nuclear facilities, amid ongoing uncertainty about the status of Tehran’s nuclear program. The threat of a wider conflict in the Middle East is on everyone's minds as tensions between Iran and Israel—now openly aided by the U.S.—intensify.

Keep ReadingShow less
Las Vegas sign
welcome to fabulous las vegas nevada signage

People Reveal The Times 'What Happens In Vegas' Did Not Stay In Vegas

"What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas"...

The age-old slogan encourages visitors to put their fears and inhibitions to the side while indulging in all that "Sin City" has to offer.

Keep ReadingShow less
Marjorie Taylor Greene; Donald Trump
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

MTG Goes Off On Trump Over Iran Attack—And Warns Of What Could Happen Next

Georgia Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene criticized President Donald Trump in a lengthy post on X following his unilateral decision to bomb Iran over the weekend.

Greene is one of the most devout MAGA adherents in Congress, so her policy split is rare but shows just how deeply Trump has angered his own base since he authorized a series of intense U.S. air and submarine strikes targeting three Iranian nuclear facilities, amid ongoing uncertainty about the status of Tehran’s nuclear program

Keep ReadingShow less