The new leader, Thomas Reiter saved most Nationalist Movement assets and intellectual property after Barrett's murder.
Its Neighborhood, Home, Family and Country parade and rally in South Boston drew crowds and police.
It held a demonstration in Simi Valley, California in 1992, in defense of the police officers accused of beating Rodney King.
In 1992, it won in the United States Supreme Court, in Forsyth County, Georgia v. The Nationalist Movement, establishing new First Amendment jurisprudence, which lifted bans on its use of public property and mandated police protection for its parades and rallies.
It sees itself as policing the ranks of nationalists, often supporting the prosecution of white supremacists, such as Matthew Hale and David Duke.
All The Way showcased white supremacists, notably Edgar Ray Killen, and billed itself as "the longest-running continually published nationalist newspaper."