Biden 11th-Circuit Nominee Abudu Works for Anti-white, Pro-communist SPLC
Nancy Abudu

If all goes as planned, the Senate Judiciary Committee will soon consider a nominee for the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals who is even more radical than recently confirmed Ketanji Jackson Brown, the new associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court who doesn’t know what a woman is.

President Biden’s latest nominee is Nancy Abudu, a radical leftist — if not a communist — who toils for the openly anti-white, pro-communist Southern Poverty Law Center.

Hearings on Biden’s nominees are slated for April 27. 

SPLC’s Invitation to Murder

Led by the Family Research Council, a victim of the SPLC’s smear tactics that almost led to a mass murder at FRC headquarters, prominent conservatives laid out the case against Abudu in a detailed letter.

Writing to Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin and his GOP counterpart, Chuck Grassley, in January, the signatories were blunt. 

“Abudu works for a disreputable organization that has no business being a feeder for positions to any judicial office — not even of a traffic court — let alone the second highest court system in the United States. She is a political activist not a jurist and is unfit to serve at the federal appellate level,” they wrote.

Of course, Biden and his people certainly know about SPLC. And they know why Abudu will be opposed. But Biden nominated the leftist precisely because she works for the leftist smear machine. Biden’s controllers want a hard-core leftist on the 11th circuit.

SPLC is a “a corrupt organization infamous for its decades-long managerial corruption and notorious for unscrupulously designating its political opponents as ‘hate groups’ or ‘extremists,’” the letter averred:

These destructive accusations have done real harm to many people. In the first conviction under the post-9/11 District of Columbia terrorism statute, the convicted terrorist was shown to have been motivated by the SPLC’s “hate group” designation and related identifying information

In 2012, that nutcake, Floyd Lee Conkins, went to FRC headquarters in Washington, D.C., on a murder mission because of SPLC:

Using the SPLC “hate map,” this native of northern Virginia targeted the Family Research Council (FRC) and two other nearby groups in August 2012 for having beliefs supporting traditional marriage. Fortunately, no one was killed, although he did shoot and critically wound FRC’s unarmed building manager who subdued him while wounded.

Despite repeated requests, the SPLC has refused to change its defamatory designations of organizations like FRC with whom, at the end of the day, it merely holds deeply held policy differences. The shooter-domestic terrorist told the FBI that the source of his information was the SPLC. Worse yet, over the past decade the SPLC has targeted an increasing number of policy groups with whom it has policy disagreements. Any group that disagrees with the SPLC about positions it advocates is deemed to be evil and worthy of destruction.

Of course, SPLC hates The New American and its publisher, The John Birch Society.

The Problem With Abudu

Aside from being a political activist, the signers wrote, Abudu surely knew not only about the shooting, but also about SPLC’s “sleazy corporate culture,” which included “long-term charges of racial discrimination and sex harassment” against founder Morris Dees. “There was a mountain of evidence … when Ms. Abudu arrived there.”

Dees and other SPLC leaders were jettisoned.

Abudu, the letter said, could have easily learned about the outfit’s “notorious reputation” even among leftists, and she clearly didn’t care about SPLC’s “toxic racial and sexual climate.”

The committee must find out whether Abudu interviewed with Morris or any other notorious leaders who were forced to resign, the letter said:

Abudu’s acceptance of a senior litigation management role inside America’s largest political defamation factory disqualifies her from any position in which she would be expected to serve as an impartial arbiter of facts and law.

Based in Atlanta, Georgia, the appeals court for the 11th Circuit receives appeals from Georgia and Alabama.

Adubu would be required to recuse herself from any cases in those states brought by either SPLC or the communist-founded American Civil Liberties Union, another subversive outfit for which she worked.