MADISON, Wis. — Yesterday, new reporting from the Milwaukee Courier detailed Derrick Van Orden’s long history of anti-Muslim and racist comments. The article points to tweets from multiple accounts Van Orden posted on over several years, all of which stoke the flames of increasing Islamophobia in the United States. 

“Derrick Van Orden has cried countless crocodile tears over increasing political violence, yet picks up his phone and continues to post tweets that dehumanize and vilify Muslims, including Muslim Americans,” said Democratic Party of Wisconsin spokesperson Haley King. “He cruelly enjoys exploiting a group that has historically been discriminated against to fearmonger and distract from his record of failing Wisconsinites. Make no mistake, this is Van Orden’s campaign strategy: He would rather run a campaign of hatred, fear, and division over one that brings communities together.”  

Milwaukee Courier:Van Orden’s social media history shows pattern of anti-Muslim, racist comments
By: Drake Bentley | 6/20/26

Republican Wisconsin Congressman Derrick Van Orden has a history of Islamophobia and racism, including spreading baseless fears of American Muslims being terrorists and child rapists. 

Van Orden’s Twitter history and media appearances show the sitting U.S. congressman is not adhering to the attempts by President Donald Trump’s administration to downplay the White House’s immigration policies ahead of the midterms. Public polling suggests the majority of Americans disapprove of the president’s tactics. 

Van Orden is seeking reelection in Wisconsin’s 3rd Congressional District. In 2024, he won by about 11,000 votes over Democratic challenger Rebecca Cooke, who is seeking the seat again. 

Locally, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has increased its presence in Wisconsin.

One prominent Black Muslim leader in Milwaukee said Van Orden’s online history shows he is incapable of doing the job any longer and has further endangered followers of Islam. 

Here is a history of Van Orden’s Islamophobic and racist comments: 

Just last week, Van Orden replied to a tweet that stated “Muslims struggle to denounce child rape.” The congressman wrote, “This is horrible and completely true.”  

The week prior, he agreed with a X account spreading an unsubstantiated claim that brown Muslim men raped 250,000 white children through grooming gangs. 

“Correct” and “It is shocking and shameful,” Van Orden wrote

On June 17, Matt Walsh, a right wing influencer, spread a lie that it’s part of the Muslim culture that “sexual torture and slavery of children is commonplace,” to which Van Orden replied, “This is an accurate statement.” 

When the president of the Islamic Society of Milwaukee was arrested by the Trump administration in April, Van Orden took to X to say, “I find it shocking that someone named: ‘Salah Salem Sarsour’ would be arrested for terrorism. This must be a mistake.”

A federal judge ordered the release of Sarsour earlier this month. 

In March, Van Orden found it “absolutely unacceptable” that nearly half of the doctors in a Texas hospital’s residency program were Pakistani. 

In February, during the Pepin County GOP Lincoln Day Dinner, Van Orden said the United States was susceptible to a domestic terrorist attack from people in big cities with Islamic populations. 

“It is indisputable that there are radical Muslim sleeper cells here in America murdering American citizens. It is also indisputable that there are people here in America that are being radicalized currently by foolish democrat politician’s hate America rhetoric,” he wrote on X on March 13

“And everybody. I’m not kidding. Keep your head on a swivel, the face out of your phone and pay attention when you’re walking around, especially in concentrated urban areas,” he reiterated March 2 on a conservative radio show. 

Following the election of the first Muslim mayor of New York City, Van Orden made several comments. 

Just this week, he said Jewish people who voted for Zohran Mamdani have “suicidal empathy.” In March, he agreed with a post claiming Mamdani was signaling Islam had conquered America’s biggest city. He responded to a conservative radio host that same day. 

In recent years, Van Orden has stated countries with significant Muslim populations have “committed cultural suicide.” 

Van Orden has called for the denaturalization of American journalists born elsewhere, while defending conservative journalists born in America. The congressman called to “de naturalize” and deport journalist Medhi Hasan when he fell for a fake news video of Hasan comparing Trump’s war failure in Iran to 9/11. 

Van Orden had previously said it would be unfair to deport conservative columnist Bill Kristol because he was an American. “He is an American citizen, so we should not deport him, as that would be unlawful, but he should be shit on like the @nytimes lining a bird cage,” he wrote in November.  

Recently, Van Orden followed James Fishback, a candidate for governor of Florida who is running a campaign that many have described as racist. 

Fishback has repeatedly called his Black opponent Byron Donalds a “slave” to donors. He also used the term “By’rone” and referenced a “Section 8 ghetto” while reposting a far-right account on X.

But Van Orden’s history of bigoted comments goes back a while. Like Trump, he claimed that Haitian immigrants were eating pets in Ohio during the 2024 election cycle.

He also said he would show Colin Kaepernick real oppression for kneeling during the national anthem. “Not a fan of commenting on stuff like this, but I am disgusted with this punk Kaepernick. I can show him oppression,” he wrote in 2016.

In 2015, he responded to a tweet of a man holding a decapitated head that stated, “Call me a hater if you want but when is the last time you saw a photo of anyone but a Muslim holding a human head?”

“Very good question,” Van Orden wrote.  

Bramouse Muhammad, the current Imam of the Sultan Muhammad Islamic Center and director of education at Clara Mohammed School in Milwaukee, said Van Orden’s rhetoric only adds to the growing culture of Islamophobia and antisemitism.

[…] 

“Based on these statements, attitudes, and patterns of agreement — none of which reflect respect for the millions of Muslim Americans who call this country home — we cannot, in good conscience, support Derrick Van Orden as a representative for the state of Wisconsin. A representative is entrusted to serve and uplift all of his constituents, not to lend credibility to rhetoric that demeans and endangers an entire faith community. Until he is willing to publicly reject this language and hold himself accountable for the company and statements he has aligned with, he does not deserve our support or our vote.”