The Daily Telegraph of London put Erickson on its "List of Most Influential US Conservatives", giving him a rank of 69th most influential in 2007 and 65th in 2010. According According to
The Atlantic, Erickson's conservatism is more traditional (as opposed to libertarian) and "deeply informed by his evangelical faith". calling Trump's remark "a bridge too far" and that even "blunt talkers and unprofessional politicians should not cross" certain lines, including decency. Erickson described Trump as "a racist" and "a fascist", and insisted, "I will not vote for Donald Trump. Ever." Nevertheless, Erickson endorsed Trump in the
2020 United States presidential election and the
2024 United States presidential election. On May 12, 2025, an extensive report was published that Erickson criticized the plan by Trump to accept an airplane from Qatar and that he provided "widely held criticisms of the gift".
Gender In 2013, Erickson was criticized by
Elle Reeve in
The Atlantic for saying in an interview on
Fox Business Network that males dominate females in the "natural world" and it was only "science" for men to be the breadwinners for their families.
Guns In December 2015, Erickson posted a picture of a bullet-ridden copy of
The New York Times that he had shot at. That day's edition contained a front-page editorial in favor of
gun control. Erickson spread a false story by RedState which claimed that 17-year old
Parkland, Florida school shooting survivor
David Hogg was not actually at the Parkland school when it was attacked. He later described Hogg as a "bully" after Hogg called for an advertiser boycott of Fox News host
Laura Ingraham when she mocked him for not getting into a number of universities.
LGBT rights In August 2017, Erickson was one of several co-authors of the so-called
Nashville Statement, which affirmed "that it is sinful to approve of
homosexual immorality or
transgenderism and that such approval constitutes an essential departure from Christian faithfulness and witness." The statement, which was described as a "vicious, anti-
LGBTQ manifesto" by the LGBTQ advocacy group
Human Rights Campaign, was attacked by some
Christian leaders.
Attacks on public figures In April 2009, Erickson described retiring
Supreme Court Justice David Souter on his Twitter account as "the only goat fucking
child molester to ever serve on the
Supreme Court". In an appearance on
The Colbert Report, Erickson said the statement was "not my finest hour." Erickson compared the
Obama administration's health care communications director
Linda Douglass to
Nazi propagandist
Joseph Goebbels.
Augusto Pinochet In November 2018, Erickson tweeted that
foreign aid to
Guatemala,
Nicaragua,
Honduras,
El Salvador and
Mexico would be more effectively spent installing "
Pinochet types" in these countries. He added that the US should "support strong leaders who support
free market reforms and promote economic stability, even if with a heavy hand". When challenged on this proposal, Erickson replied "I'm hoping for some helicopters in this plan", a reference to the
death flights in
Chile during Pinochet's regime.
Kathryn Sikkink, a professor in International Relations at the
Harvard Kennedy School, responded to Erickson's remarks. She noted that "Pinochet was a Chilean dictator who committed massive human rights abuses," and that Erickson got the "facts exactly backward. Recent history and social science don't show that authoritarian regimes stop people from fleeing across borders. They show that they make more people want to flee." ==Bibliography==