American Free Press was founded by Willis Carto. Carto was most politically involved in his career throughout the 1960s. He was known for his extremist ideologies in white supremacist and anti-semitic movements.[5][6]
Attendees of the 2006 American Free Press/The Barnes Review, conference included[8]Arthur J. Jones, former member Nationalist Socialist White People's Party.
Some authors of the American Free Press such as Michael Collins Piper and Carto-affiliated institutions such as the Institute for Historical Review have published books which have been published in paper and electronic format on the America First Books website. William B. Fox is the publisher. It promotes nationalist viewpoints similar to those of the American Free Press and its authors.[citation needed]
Eustace Mullins was on the editorial staff of the American Free Press.[9]
The Southern Poverty Law Center considers it a hate group[10] and says that it "carries stories on Zionism, secret 'New World Order' conspiracies, American Jews and Israel."[11] One of the newspaper's ex-contract reporters, Christopher Bollyn, has advocated on behalf of the 9/11 Truth Movement.[12] The Anti-Defamation League has criticised the newspaper and, in particular, Bollyn for linking of prominent figures in the Jewish community with the events of September 11, 2001, and in September 2006 attacked the newspaper for disseminating "antisemitic propaganda".[13]
Pro-Israel conservative activists, such as Kenneth R. Timmerman, have criticized contributors to the American Free Press.[citation needed] In a May 2011 article, contributor Mark Dankof protested the British government's attempt to shut down Press TV,[14] blaming it on "media outlets and correspondents with provable connections to the American Jewish lobby; Israeli intelligence; and Neo-Conservatives thirsting for a War of Civilizations with Iran specifically, and the Islamic world generally."[15]