Arkansas GOP officials aren't supportingNeil Kumar 's bid forCongress due to his extremist views.- Kumar raised money Thursday using transphobic and homophobic language.
US House hopeful Neil Kumar of Arkansas leaned into the nation's culture wars hard on Thursday, seeding a fundraising appeal with homophobic attacks and apocalyptic imagery.
The "LBGT Groomers Want Your Kids" email blast is straight from the MAGA culture wars playbook, portraying public schools as "psychological torture camps," pedophilia as the greatest threat humanity has ever faced, and existing politicians — Democrats and Republicans, in this case — as part of a systemic problem.
"Education has been replaced by the promotion of the depraved
As for the term LGBT, which refers to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
Kumar's fundraising pitch continues with horror stories about transgender children in California and Virginia, but does not reference any LBGT-related issues in Arkansas 3rd congressional district, where he is actually running.
Kumar did not respond to Insider's requests for comment about his fundraising appeal. But following publication of this article, he posted it to his Facebook page with the comment, "New endorsement from Business Insider!"
The candidate's evil-is-everywhere outlook spooked state party officials months ago.
Arkansas GOP party chairman Jonelle Fulmer tagged Kumar as a "non-recommended candidate" last fall, adding that it wouldn't endorse or defend "racist, bigoted, sexist or threatening language by any candidate."
Kumar, who is challenging six-term GOP Rep.
"I view publicly losing the endorsement of the pro-illegal immigrant, pro-China Arkansas Republican Party — whose top priority is protecting Walmart, Tyson's Chicken, and China's bag man Steve Womack and his good pals Tom Cotton and John Boozman — as a badge of honor," Kumar wrote to the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in an email panning his sitting representative and both senators from Arkansas.
"Unlike those corporate-funded clowns, I'm running for Congress to fight for the people of Arkansas — not Walmart, not China, and not the D.C. special interests who are giving away the birthrights of heritage Americans," he wrote.
Kumar's campaign platform includes a call to "fight
In a 2021 post to his Facebook page, Kumar appears dressed in a Confederate battle flag tie and suspenders.
His extreme-right fundraising pitches have not, however, proven lucrative: As of March 31, Kumar's campaign reported about $29,000 cash on hand and $30,000 worth of debt from money Kumar himself loaned his campaign, according to disclosures filed with the Federal Election Commission.
Kumar's campaign raised less than $18,000 between January 1 and March 31, FEC records indicate.
The GOP primary in Arkansas is scheduled for May 24.