Frederick George "Rick" Wilson (born November 21, 1963)[1] is an American political strategist, media consultant, and author based in
Florida. A former member of the
Republican Party, he has produced televised political commercials for
governors,
U.S. Senate candidates,
Super PACs, and corporations.[2]
Wilson played a significant role in the
2002 United States Senate election in Georgia, in which
Saxby Chambliss was facing Democratic Party Senator
Max Cleland, a disabled Vietnam veteran and recipient of the
Silver Star. Wilson helped create an ad that criticized Cleland, while also tying him to
Osama bin Laden and
Saddam Hussein. The ad appeared to question Cleland's patriotism.[7][8] In an interview with HuffPost, Wilson stated that he thought that "DHS [Department of Homeland Security] was on the front line against Osama bin Laden".[9] As Wilson reflected in 2016, "The Cleland ad was powerful because it went to his strengths [...] Everyone assumed Cleland was immune to critiques on national security issues. [...] they didn't calculate that I have no moral center when it comes to political ads, and I will destroy the innocent and the guilty".[10] Following Cleland's death in 2021, Wilson received criticism from journalists such as
Glenn Greenwald and
Charlie Pierce.[11][12]
In 2012, Wilson posted to Instagram an image of a cooler emblazoned with a Confederate battle flag and the words "The South Shall Rise Again", prompting allegations of racism.[13][14][15] After public backlash, Wilson eventually deleted the post. It resurfaced in 2020 while The Lincoln Project was airing television ads attacking the public display of that flag.[13][15][14] He had left the Republican Party following the
2016 United States presidential election, and in late 2019, co-founded
The Lincoln Project, a
Super PAC organized by then-current and former Republicans opposed to and working to prevent the re-election of
Donald Trump in the
2020 United States presidential election.[16]
In January 2020, Wilson appeared alongside CNN anchor
Don Lemon and CNN contributor Wajahat Ali in which they discussed an exchange between United States Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo and NPR reporter Mary Louise Kelly. During this segment, Wilson made comments about Trump supporters, stating they were "part of the credulous
boomerrubedemo". He employed the tone of
Southern American English in the segment for emphasis.[17] Wilson has been known to use extremely crude language and generalizations, such as, when criticizing supporters of Donald Trump during an interview with MSNBC leading up to the 2016 presidential election, he called them "childless single men who masturbate to anime".[18]
In June 2020, Wilson tweeted a response to a 2012
Domino's Pizza tweet thanking
White House Press SecretaryKayleigh McEnany, then a college student, for her opinion that Domino's pizza was superior to pizza from New York. In his tweet, Wilson declared, "You just killed your brand." This later prompted a response from Domino's Pizza's official Twitter account, saying "Welp. It's unfortunate that thanking a customer for a compliment back in 2012 would be viewed as political. Guess that's 2020 for ya."[19][20][21] According to The Daily Dot, "Domino’s response immediately went viral", however, they credited Wilson for not deleting the tweet "despite the unrelenting onslaught of mockery" directed at him.[22]
Wilson's second book, entitled Running Against the Devil: A Plot to Save America from Trump – and Democrats from Themselves, was published in January 2020.[29]
Since 2020, Wilson and fellow The Daily Beast contributor
Molly Jong-Fast have been the hosts of the podcast The New Abnormal.[30]
In October 2022, Wilson launched a new podcast entitled The Enemies List, named after Richard Nixon's famous list of political enemies.[31] Also in 2022, Wilson joined the board of directors of
VoteRiders, an American non-partisan,
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is to ensure that all U.S. citizens over 18 years of age are able to exercise their right to vote. [32]