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No, Democrats are not using a Nazi slogan in campaign | Fact check

An Aug. 16 Instagram post (direct link, archive link) from actor Robert Davi includes a link to the Wikipedia entry for “Strength Through Joy” and a video.
“’Strength Through Joy’ was a Nazi slogan from 1933 all the way through the whole World War II,” Davi says in the video. “Think about that, read about it. I’m giving you the Wiki post, it says some information about it. Strength Through Joy. The Democratic Party’s slogan.”
The video was liked more than 17,000 times in two weeks.
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While joy has been a theme in Vice President Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign and at the Democratic National Convention, “Strength Through Joy” has not become a slogan for her or the Democratic Party.
On the campaign trail and in Democratic National Convention speeches, Harris, her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, and other Democrats have emphasized joy as a theme in the campaign.
However, there are no credible reports of the party or its candidates borrowing a phrase associated with the Nazis – “Strength Through Joy” – as a slogan. USA TODAY could find no examples of it in searches of Harris’s social media accounts or credible media coverage. It also does not appear in the Democratic Party’s platform.
“Strength Through Joy” was not the primary slogan for the Nazis, who emblazoned propaganda with “Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Fuhrer” – translating to “One People, One Country, One Leader.” But it was the name of a recreation program established by the Nazis that was intended to cultivate loyalty and improve German workers’ morale and productivity. The program’s offerings ranged from cheap vacations and cultural outings to organized fitness activities, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. It also spawned development of a car that was a forerunner to the Volkswagen Beetle.
Fact check: Harris and Walz posing with a communist sign? No, image is altered.
USA TODAY reached out to the social media user who shared the claim for comment but did not immediately receive a response.
Reuters, PolitiFact, Snopes and Lead Stories also debunked the claim.
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