Other than Nazi dross like Skrewdriver, I can really only think of Merle Haggard’s Okie From Muskogee as determinedly ‘right wing’ popular music (although he sometimes claimed it was a piss take). On the other hand, there are plenty of people whose music I admire that have, at one time or other, expressed right wing views- Van Morrison, Frank Sinatra, Eric Clapton, Rod Stewart, Neil Young. I am generally able to keep the art and the artist separate and usually able to judge music (and art in general) on its own terms and not according to the politics of its creator. Otherwise we lose the seminal contributions of TS Eliot, Ezra Pound, Evelyn Waugh et al (although I have nothing but contempt for Phil Collins; political and artistic).
But the music we love is, by and large, evolved from black musical forms that were themselves reaction to hardship and oppression. I dislike the misogyny in some reggae, but that doesn’t mean I don’t find Bob Marley and Burning Spear tremendously emotionally and spiritually uplifting. I’m enormously moved by the gospel of Aretha Franklin, even if I prefer not to accept the Christian content.
Rock and roll and soul emerged from the music of the dispossessed. It was an expression of suffering, hope and sometimes defiance- which is what makes it so exciting and inspiring. I just couldn’t get excited about any music that concerned itself with trickle down wealth, the rate of profit and middle class aspiration.