Quote Origin: Sure, We’ll Have Fascism in This Country, and We’ll Call It Anti-Fascism

Huey Long? Winston Churchill? Bruce Bliven? H. L. Mencken? Lawrence Dennis? Jimmy Street? Robert Cantwell? Lawrence Dennis? Halford Luccock

Question for Quote Investigator: The famous populist Huey Long and British leader Winston Churchill have both been credited with a bold prediction about political deception. Here are two versions:

  • When the United States gets fascism, it will call it anti-fascism.
  • The fascists of the future will be called anti-fascists.

Would you please investigate?

Reply from Quote Investigator: QI has found no substantive evidence supporting the ascription to Winston Churchill.

Huey Long died on September 10, 1935. The earliest strong match located by QI appeared in an article with the byline “J. F. McD.” published on February 22, 1936 in “The Cincinnati Enquirer” of Cincinnati, Ohio. Emphasis added to excerpts by QI:1

Norman Thomas said recently in a speech made in Cincinnati “Fascism is coming in the United States most probably, but it will not come under that name.” In this statement he was repeating the words of the late Huey Long, but Huey added: “Of course we’ll have it. We’ll have it under the guise of anti-fascism.”

The ascription to Long is popular but the phrasing has been highly-variable, Also, QI has not yet found direct instances in Long’s writings, speeches, or interviews. This article presents a snapshot of current incomplete knowledge.

Below are additional selected citations in chronological order.

QI has also examined a different, but related, quotation. The entry about the following saying is available here:

When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag.

The political commentator Lawrence Dennis was sympathetic to fascism in the 1930s although he changed his viewpoint later. In 1936 he predicted fascism’s ascent in the book “The Coming American Fascism”:2

Nothing could be more logical or in the best political tradition than for a type of fascism to be ushered into this country by leaders who are now vigorously denouncing fascism and repudiating all that it is understood to stand for.

On June 22, 1937 an editorial in “The Daily Herald” of Provo, Utah ascribed the notion to Bruce Bliven:3

Bruce Bliven, editor of the New Republic, sagely remarked not long ago that if or when Fascism ever makes any headway in America, it will probably be known as “Anti-Fascism.”

In September 1938 a prominent religious figure warned that fascism might be disguised as “Americanism”:4

When and if fascism comes to America it will not be labeled “made in Germany”; it will not be marked with a swastika; it will not even be called fascism; it will be called, of course, “Americanism,” Professor Halford E. Luccock of the Divinity School of Yale University said yesterday morning in a sermon at the Riverside Church, Riverside Drive and 122d Street.

In October 1938 an editorial in “The Daily Tribune” of Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin attributed the thought to Long.5 The same editorial text appeared in other newspapers such as The Owosso Argus-Press” of Owosso, Michigan:6

Huey Long once remarked that America probably would have Fascism some day; but, he added, “when we get it we won’t call it Fascism—we’ll call it anti-Fascism.” And Huey’s wise-crack is much more worth remembering than are the revelations of the Dies committee.

In November 1938 the prominent commentator H. L. Mencken writing in “The Baltimore Sun” of Baltimore, Maryland propounded the same provocative thesis:7

My own belief, more than once set afloat from this spot, is that it will take us, soon or late, into the stormy waters of Fascism. To be sure, that Fascism is not likely to be identical with the kinds on tap in Germany, Italy and Russia; indeed, it is very apt to come in under the name of anti-Fascism. And its first Duce, whether the Hon. Mr. Roosevelt or another, will not call himself a dictator, but a scotcher of dictators.

In March 1939 “LIFE” magazine ascribed the saying to Huey Long:8

The late Huey P. Long, who knew all the tricks of the dissembling demagog, was once asked: “Do you think we will ever have Fascism in America?” Said the Kingfish: “Sure, only we’ll call it anti-Fascism.”

Also in March 1939 the “Akron Beacon Journal” of Akron, Ohio printed the following instance:9

Anti-democracy is hydra-headed; it takes a thousand forms, many of them impossible to detect without close examination. They are part of what the late Huey Long meant when he said, “Sure, we’ll have Fascism in this country and we’ll call it anti-Fascism.”

In June 1939 Lillian Symes writing in “Harper’s Magazine” attributed the remark to Long:10

If a fascist movement ever triumphs in America it will undoubtedly triumph in the name of our most popular slogan—Democracy, and under the leadership of some such “friend of the common people” as the late Huey Long. (It was Huey who prophesied that Fascism would come to America in the name of “anti-Fascism.”) Whoever its angels and whatever their purpose, it will speak the language of a populist Left.

In June 1941 Willson Whitman writing in “The New Republic” ascribed the notion to Long:11

It was Huey Long who warned that fascism in this country would come in the guise of anti-fascism; and before Huey was cold in his grave his Texas neighbor was attacking the wages-and-hours law on the ground that it would “establish a fascist bureaucracy.”

In July 1943 syndicated columnist Westbrook Pegler wrote the following:12

Huey Long never made a shrewder observation than his remark that if Fascism came to the United States it would come disguised as anti-Fascism.

In December 1943 columnist Leonard Lyons in the “New York Post” made an intriguing claim. Lyons asserted that Long spoke the much-repeated saying to his press agent Jimmy Street. The ellipses below were in the original text:13

Jimmy Street, the novelist screenwriter, once was Huey Long’s press agent, when Long was Railroad Commissioner of Louisiana. “Huey,” Street asked him, “do you think Fascism ever will come to America?” . . . “Yes, I do,” said Long . . . “How?” asked Street . . . “It will come,” said Long, “in the guise of anti-Fascism.”

In 1944 the industrious publisher and quotation collector Bennett Cerf included the following instance in his compilation “Try and Stop Me”:14

Somebody once asked the late Huey Long if he thought we would ever have fascism in the United States. “Sure we will,” predicted Long, “only we’ll call it anti-fascism!”

In February 1944 Malcolm Cowley writing in “The New Republic” asserted that Long delivered the line to the novelist Robert Cantwell during a 1933 interview. However, contradictory evidence is presented further below:15

Huey Long had a somewhat similar idea. He is supposed to have said (it was in 1933, when he was interviewed by Robert Cantwell), “Of course we’ll have fascism in this country-under the guise of anti-fascism.” The remark has been quoted and misquoted at least a hundred times and always with implied praise for Huey Long’s sagacity.

In 1951 historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. contacted Robert Cantwell and asked about the saying. Cantwell told Schlesinger that he had not heard the quotation from Huey Long. Schlesinger published this information in 1960:16

In 1935 some people wondered whether Long was the first serious American fascist . . . He had no ideological preoccupations; he never said, “When the United States gets fascism it will call it anti-fascism,” nor was he likely to think in such terms. [Footnote 7]

[Footnote 7] He is supposed to have said this to Robert Cantwell; but Mr. Cantwell informs me (June 6, 1951), “It is not what Long said in his talk with me; but it is not basically opposed to what he said.” Actually the epigram ascribed to Long would be much more characteristic of someone like Lawrence Dennis. Indeed, Dennis said very much the same thing: “Nothing could be more logical or in the best political tradition than for a type of fascism to be ushered into this country by leaders who are now vigorously denouncing fascism” (Coming American Fascism, New York, 1936, ix). . .

The ascription to Winston Churchill was circulating in the newsgroup be.politics by 2008:17

> “The fascists of the future will be called
> anti-fascists.” (Winston Churchill)

In conclusion, the linkage to Winston Churchill was spurious. QI does not know whether Huey Long made this remark. The first ascription to him appeared in 1936 after his death in 1935. H. L. Mencken did write a similar statement in 1938 although the notion was already in circulation. Perhaps future researchers will locate superior evidence.

Acknowledgement: Great thanks to David A. Daniel and Bonnie Taylor-Blake whose inquiries led QI to formulate this question and perform this exploration. Special thanks to discussants and researchers Fred Shapiro, Victor Steinbok, Dan Goncharoff, Stephen Goranson, and Peter Reitan who identified valuable citations.

Update History: On May 28, 2018 the 1936 citation for Lawrence Dennis was added. Also the 1938 citation for Halford Luccock was added. On July 24, 2024 the format of the bibliographical notes was updated.

  1. 1936 February 22, The Cincinnati Enquirer, A “Lively Age” To Come? by J. F. McD., (Book Review of “In the second Year” by Storm Jameson), Quote Page 7, Column 1, Cincinnati, Ohio. (Newspapers.com) ↩︎
  2. 1936, The Coming American Fascism by Lawrence Dennis, Chapter: Introduction, Quote Page ix, Harper & Brothers, New York. (Reprint edition published in 1972 by AMS Press, New York) (Verified with scans) ↩︎
  3. 1937 June 22, The Evening Herald (The Daily Herald), Not All Fascists Wear Funny Colored Shirts (Editorial), Section 2, Quote Page 2, Column 1, Provo, Utah. (Newspapers_com) ↩︎
  4. 1938 September 12, New York Times, Disguised Fascism Seen as a Menace, Quote Page 15, New York. (ProQuest) ↩︎
  5. 1938 October 10, Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune, If Fascism Comes, Quote Page 4, Column 1, Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin. (Newspapers_com) ↩︎
  6. 1938 October 11, The Owosso Argus-Press, Section: Editorial, If Fascism Comes, Page 4, Column 1, Owosso, Michigan. (Google News Archive) ↩︎
  7. 1938 November 6, The Baltimore Sun, Of The People, By The People by H. L. Mencken, Quote Page 8, Column 6, Baltimore, Maryland. (Newspapers_com) ↩︎
  8. 1939 March 6, LIFE, Fascism in America: Like Communism It Masquerades as Americanism, Some of the Voices of Hate, Start Page 57, Quote Page 60, Column 1, Time Inc., New York. (Google Books Full View) link ↩︎
  9. 1939 March 17, Akron Beacon Journal, Our Job Is At Home, Quote Page 4, Column 1, Akron, Ohio. (Newspapers_com) ↩︎
  10. 1939 June, Harper’s Magazine, Volume 179, Fascism for America–Threat or Scarehead? by Lillian Symes, Start Page 35, Quote Page 40, Column 1, Harper & Brothers, New York. (Verified on microfilm) ↩︎
  11. 1941 June 2, The New Republic, Blacklist in Action by Willson Whitman, Start Page 752, Quote Page 754, The New Republic, Washington, D.C. (Verified on microfilm) ↩︎
  12. 1943 July 28, The Hartford Courant, Fair Enough by Westbrook Pegler, Quote Page 2, Column 2, Hartford, Connecticut. (ProQuest) ↩︎
  13. 1943 December 1, New York Post, The Lyons Den by Leonard Lyons, Quote Page 30, Column 4, New York, New York. (Old Fulton) ↩︎
  14. 1944, Try and Stop Me by Bennett Cerf, Quote Page 263, Simon & Schuster, New York. (Verified on paper) ↩︎
  15. 1944 February 21, The New Republic, Section: Books in Review, Who’s Fascist Now? by Malcolm Cowley, (Book review of “As We Go Marching” by John T. Flynn), Start Page 246, Quote Page 246, Column 2, The New Republic, Washington, D.C. (Verified on microfilm) ↩︎
  16. 1960 Copyright, the Age of Roosevelt: The Politics of Upheaval: 1935-1936 by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Volume 3, Chapter 4: The Messiah of the Rednecks Quote Page 67, also Footnote 7, Quote Page 664 and 665, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, Massachusetts. (Verified with hardcopy of fifth printing) ↩︎
  17. 2008 November 26, Usenet discussion message, Newsgroups: be.radio,be.tv,be.politics, From: ik…@hotmail.com (ikke ), Subject: Re: VRT stoot Joden opnieuw voor de borst, (Google Groups Search; Accessed March, 2017) link ↩︎
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