Exclusive
‘I love
Hitler’: Leaked messages expose Young Republicans’ racist chat
Thousands
of private messages reveal young GOP leaders joking about gas chambers, slavery
and rape.
Everyone
that votes no is going to the gas chamber.🔥I’m ready to watch people burn nowWhen do we start bullying
dude?Are you going to do whatever it takes?Boom - they’re dead.❤️When do we bring that side out?He also hates the Jews❤️It was rapeThey love the watermelon people💩And everyone that endorsed but then
votes for us is going to the gas chamber.🔥Also … we are officially under consideration for a Trump
endorsement. 😁I’d go to the zoo if I wanted to
watch monkey play ballGreat. I love Hitler😁YooooooooThis girl is fully r------dKick the b---hyou're
giving nationals to much credit and expecting the Jew to be honest 😆Stay in the closet f----tIf we ever
had a leak of this chat we would be cooked fr fr❤️
Texts and
reactions from Young Republicans.
By Jason
Beeferman and Emily Ngo
10/14/2025
01:15 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/14/private-chat-among-young-gop-club-members-00592146
NEW YORK
— Leaders of Young Republican groups throughout the country worried what would
happen if their Telegram chat ever got leaked, but they kept typing anyway.
They
referred to Black people as monkeys and “the watermelon people” and mused about
putting their political opponents in gas chambers. They talked about raping
their enemies and driving them to suicide and lauded Republicans who they
believed support slavery.
William
Hendrix, the Kansas Young Republicans’ vice chair, used the words “n--ga” and
“n--guh,” variations of a racial slur, more than a dozen times in the chat.
Bobby Walker, the vice chair of the New York State Young Republicans at the
time, referred to rape as “epic.” Peter Giunta, who at the time was chair of
the same organization, wrote in a message sent in June that “everyone that
votes no is going to the gas chamber.”
Giunta
was referring to an upcoming vote on whether he should become chair of the
Young Republican National Federation, the GOP’s 15,000-member political
organization for Republicans between 18 and 40 years old.
“Im going
to create some of the greatest physiological torture methods known to man. We
only want true believers,” he continued.
Two
members of the chat responded.
PG
Everyone
that votes no is going to the gas chamber. And everyone that endorsed but then
votes for us is going to the gas chamber.
🔥
RH
BW
When do
we start bullying dude?
AK
We have a
solid 3 people who can prob have them want to jump
BW
If they
vote for us why would they be gassed?
AK
When do
we bring that side out?
PG
Im going
to create some of the greatest physiological torture methods known to man.
in reply
to
“If they
vote for us why would they be gassed?”
We only
want true believers.
🔥
RH
JM
Can we
fix the showers? Gas chambers don’t fit the Hitler aesthetic
❤️
PG
🤣
AK
AK
I’m ready
to watch people burn now
JM
We gotta
pretend that we like them. “Hey, come on in. Take a nice shower and relax”.
Boom - they’re dead
❤️
PG
❤️
AD
Texts and
reactions by: Peter Giunta, Bobby Walker, Anne KayKaty, Joe Maligno, Rachel
Hope, Alex Dwyer.
“Can we
fix the showers? Gas chambers don’t fit the Hitler aesthetic,” Joe Maligno, who
previously identified himself as the general counsel for the New York State
Young Republicans, wrote back.
“I’m
ready to watch people burn now,” Annie Kaykaty, New York’s national committee
member, said.
The
exchange is part of a trove of Telegram chats — obtained by POLITICO and
spanning more than seven months of messages among Young Republican leaders in
New York, Kansas, Arizona and Vermont. The chat offers an unfiltered look at
how a new generation of GOP activists talk when they think no one is listening.
Since
POLITICO began making inquiries, one member of the group chat is no longer
employed at their job and another’s job offer was rescinded. Prominent New York
Republicans, including Rep. Elise Stefanik and state Senate Minority Leader Rob
Ortt, have denounced the chat. And festering resentments among Young
Republicans have now turned into public recriminations, including allegations
of character assassination and extortion.
A
liberating atmosphere
The 2,900
pages of chats, shared among a dozen millennial and Gen Z Republicans between
early January and mid-August, chronicle their campaign to seize control of the
national Young Republican organization on a hardline pro-Donald Trump platform.
Many of the chat members already work inside government or party politics, and
one serves as a state senator.
Together,
the messages reveal a culture where racist, antisemitic and violent rhetoric
circulate freely — and where the Trump-era loosening of political norms has
made such talk feel less taboo among those positioning themselves as the
party’s next leaders.
“The more
the political atmosphere is open and liberating — like it has been with the
emergence of Trump and a more right wing GOP even before him — it opens up
young people and older people to telling racist jokes, making racist
commentaries in private and public,” said Joe Feagin, a Texas A&M sociology
professor who has studied racism for the last 60 years. He’s also concerned the
words would be applied to public policy. “It’s chilling, of course, because
they will act on these views.”
The
dynamic of easy racism and casual cruelty played out in often dark, vivid
fashion inside the chats, where campaign talk and party gossip blurred into
streams of slurs and violent fantasies.
The group
chat members spoke freely about the pressure to cow to Trump to avoid being
called a RINO, the love of Nazis within their party’s right wing and the
president’s alleged work to suppress documents related to wealthy financier
Jeffrey Epstein’s child sex crimes.
'They're
causing real harm': Kevin Hassett on the Dems' shutdown strategy
“Trumps
too busy burning the Epstein files,” Alex Dwyer, the chair of the Kansas Young
Republicans, wrote in one instance.
Dwyer and
Kaykaty declined to comment. Maligno and Hendrix did not return requests for
comment.
But some
involved in the chat did respond publicly.
Giunta
claimed the release of the chat is part of “a highly-coordinated year-long
character assassination led by Gavin Wax and the New York City Young Republican
Club” — an allusion to a once obscured internecine war that has now spilled
into the open.
“These
logs were sourced by way of extortion and provided to POLITICO by the very same
people conspiring against me,” he said. “What’s most disheartening is that,
despite my unwavering support of President Trump since 2016, rouge [sic]
members of his administration — including Gavin Wax — have participated in this
conspiracy to ruin me publicly simply because I challenged them privately.”
Wax, a
staffer in Trump’s State Department, formerly led the New York Young Republican
Club — a separate, city-based group that is at odds with the state
organization, the New York State Young Republicans. He declined to comment.
Despite
his allusions to infighting, Giunta still apologized.
“I am so
sorry to those offended by the insensitive and inexcusable language found
within the more than 28,000 messages of a private group chat that I created
during my campaign to lead the Young Republicans,” he said. “While I take
complete responsibility, I have had no way of verifying their accuracy and am
deeply concerned that the message logs in question may have been deceptively
doctored.”
At least
one person in the Telegram chat works in the Trump administration: Michael
Bartels, who, according to his LinkedIn account, serves as a senior adviser in
the office of general counsel within the U.S. Small Business Administration.
Bartels did not have much to say in the chat, but he didn’t offer any pushback
against the offensive rhetoric in it either. He declined to comment.
A
notarized affidavit signed by Bartels and obtained by POLITICO also sheds light
on the intraparty rivalry that led the “RESTOREYR WAR ROOM” Telegram chat to be
made public. Bartels references Wax as well. He wrote that he did not give
POLITICO the chat and that Wax “demanded” in a phone call that he provide the
full chat log.
“When I
attempted to resist that demand, after providing some of the requested
information, Wax threatened my professional standing, and raised the
possibility of potential legal action related to an alleged breach of a
non-disclosure agreement,” Bartels claimed in the affidavit. “My position
within the New York Young Republican Club was directly threatened.”
Walker,
who now leads the New York State Young Republicans, touched on a similar theme,
saying that he believes portions of the chat “may have been altered, taken out
of context, or otherwise manipulated” and that the “private exchanges were
obtained and released in a way clearly intended to inflict harm.”
He also
apologized.
“There is
no excuse for the language and tone in messages attributed to me. The language
is wrong and hurtful, and I sincerely apologize,” Walker said. “This has been a
painful lesson about judgment and trust, and I am committed to moving forward
with greater care, respect, and accountability in everything I say and do.”
251 times
Mixed
into formal conversations about whipping votes, social media strategy and
logistics, the members of the chat slung around an array of slurs — which
POLITICO is republishing to show how they spoke. Epithets like “f----t,”
“retarded” and “n--ga” appeared more than 251 times combined.
In one
instance, Walker — who at the time was a staffer for Ortt — talked about how a
mutual friend of some in the chat “dated this very obese Indian woman for a
period of time.”
Giunta
responded that the woman “was not Indian.”
“She just
didn’t bathe often,” Samuel Douglass, a state senator from northern Vermont and
the head of the state’s Young Republicans, replied to Giunta.
In a
separate conversation, Giunta shared that his flight to Charleston, South
Carolina, landed safely. Then, he offered some advice for his fellow Young
Republicans.
“If your
pilot is a she and she looks ten shades darker than someone from Sicily, just
end it there. Scream the no no word,” Giunta wrote.
Douglass
did not respond to requests for comment.
In a
statement, Ortt called for members of the chat to resign.
“I was
shocked and disgusted to learn about the racist, anti-Semitic, and misogynistic
comments attributed to members of the New York State Young Republicans,” Ortt
said. “This behavior is indefensible and has no place in our party or anywhere
in public life.”
Walker
had been in line to manage Republican Peter Oberacker’s campaign for Congress
in upstate New York, but a spokesperson for the campaign said Walker won’t be
brought on in light of the comments in the chat.
Seeking
Trump’s endorsement
The
private rhetoric isn’t happening in a vacuum. It comes amid a widespread
coarsening of the broader political discourse and as incendiary and racially
offensive tropes from the right become increasingly common in public debate.
Last month, Trump posted an artificial intelligence-generated video that showed
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries in a sombrero beside Senate Minority
Leader Chuck Schumer, whose fabricated remarks were about trading free health
care for immigrant votes — a false, long-running GOP trope. The sombrero meme
has been widely used to mock Democrats as the government shutdown wears on.
In his
2024 campaign, Trump spread false reports of Haitian migrants eating pets and,
at one of his rallies, welcomed comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who called Puerto
Rico a “floating island of garbage” and joked about Black people “carving
watermelons” on Halloween.
Liz
Huston, a White House spokesperson, rejected the idea that Trump’s rhetoric had
anything to do with the chat members’ language.
“Only an
activist, left-wing reporter would desperately try to tie President Trump into
a story about a random groupchat he has no affiliation with, while failing to
mention the dangerous smears coming from Democrat politicians who have
fantasized about murdering their opponent and called Republicans Nazis and
Fascists,” she said. “No one has been subjected to more vicious rhetoric and
violence than President Trump and his supporters.”
In the
“RESTOREYR WAR ROOM” chat, Giunta tells his fellow Republicans that he spoke
with the White House about an endorsement from Trump for his bid to become
chairman of the national federation. Trump and the Republican National
Committee ultimately decided to stay neutral in the race.
A White
House official said that it has no affiliation with Restore YR and that
hundreds of groups ask the White House for its endorsement.
Giunta
was the most prominent voice in the chat spreading racist messages — often
encouraged or “liked” by other members.
When Luke
Mosiman, the chair of the Arizona Young Republicans, asked if the New Yorkers
in the chat were watching an NBA playoff game, Giunta responded, “I’d go to the
zoo if I wanted to watch monkey play ball.” Giunta elsewhere refers to Black
people as “the watermelon people.”
Hendrix
made a similar remark in July: “Bro is at a chicken restaurant ordering his
food. Would he like some watermelon and kool aid with that?”
Hendrix
was a communications assistant for Kansas’ Republican Attorney General Kris
Kobach until Thursday. He also said in the chat that, despite political
differences, he’s drawn to Missouri’s Young Republican organization because
“Missouri doesn’t like f--s.”
POLITICO
reached out to Danedri Herbert, a spokesperson for the attorney general who
also serves as the Kansas GOP chair, and shared with her excerpts of the chat
involving Hendrix. In response, Herbert said that “we are aware of the issues
raised in your article” and that Hendrix is “no longer employed” in Kobach’s
office.
AD
Yea I had
some back and forth with the VC in Michigan, current chair is a deer in
headlights
❤️
PG
We have a
call Wednesday
PG
Many
agree.
AD
He did
say “My delegates I bring will vote for the most right wing person”
❤️
RH
PG
Great. I
love Hitler
😁
AD
Texts and
reactions by: Alex Dwyer, Peter Giunta, Rachel Hope.
In
another exchange, Dwyer, the Kansas’ chair, informs Giunta that one of
Michigan’s Young Republicans promised him the group “will vote for the most
right wing person” to lead the national organization.
“Great. I
love Hitler,” Giunta responded.
Dwyer
reacted with a smiley face.
Few
minority groups spared
Giunta,
who serves as chief of staff to New York state Assemblymember Mike Reilly,
ultimately fell six points short of winning the chairship to lead the Young
Republican National Federation earlier this year — despite earning endorsements
from Stefanik and longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone.
Reilly
did not respond to requests for comment.
Earlier
this year, Stefanik accepted an award from the New York State Young
Republicans. She lauded Giunta for his “tremendous leadership” in August and
had her campaign and the political PAC she leads donate to that state
organization. Alex deGrasse, a senior adviser for Stefanik, said the
congresswoman “was absolutely appalled to learn about the alleged comments made
by leaders of the New York State Young Republicans and other state YRs in a
large national group chat.”
“According
to the description provided by Politico, the comments were heinous,
antisemitic, racist and unacceptable,” he continued, noting Stefanik has never
employed anyone in the chat. “If the description by Politico is accurate,
Congresswoman Stefanik calls for any NY Young Republicans responsible for these
horrific comments in this chat to step down immediately.”
Stone
also condemned the comments in a statement.
“I of
course, have never seen this alleged chat room thread,” he said. “If it is
authentic, I would, of course, denounce any such comments in the strongest
possible terms, This would surprise me as it is inconsistent with Peter that I
know, although I only know him in his capacity as the head of the New York
Young Republicans, where I thought he did a good job.”
Few
minority groups are spared from the Young Republican group’s chat. Their
rhetoric — normalized at most points as dark humor — mirrors some popular
conservative political commentators, podcasters and comedians amid a national
erosion of what’s considered acceptable discourse.
Giunta’s
line on a darker-skinned pilot, for example, echoes one used by slain
conservative activist Charlie Kirk last year when he said, “If I see a Black
pilot, I’m going to be like, boy, I hope he’s qualified.” Kirk was discussing
how diversity hiring “invites unwholesome thinking.”
Walker
also uses the moniker “eyepatch McCain” (originally coined by conservative
commentator Tucker Carlson) in an apparent reference to GOP Rep. Dan Crenshaw.
Crenshaw lost his eye while serving as a Navy SEAL in Afghanistan. Walker also
makes the remark, “I prefer my war heroes not captured,” a repeat of a similar
2015 line from Trump.
Art
Jipson, a professor at the University of Dayton who specializes in white racial
extremism, surmised the Young Republicans in the chat were influenced by
Trump’s language, which he said is often hyperbolic and emotionally charged.
“Trump’s
persistent use of hostile, often inflammatory language that normalizes
aggressive discourse in conservative circles can be incredibly influential on
young operatives who are still trying to figure out, ‘What is that political
discourse?’” Jipson said.
White
supremacist symbols
Jipson
reviewed multiple excerpts of the Young Republicans’ chat provided by POLITICO.
One was a late July message where Mosiman, the chair of the Arizona Young
Republicans, mused about how the group could win support for their preferred
candidate by linking an opponent to white supremacist groups. But Mosiman then
realized the plan could backfire — Kansas’ Young Republicans could end up
becoming attracted to that opponent.
“Can we
get them to start releasing Nazi edits with her… Like pro Nazi and faciam [sic]
propaganda,” he asked the group.
“Omg I
love this plan,” Rachel Hope, the Arizona Young Republicans events chair,
responded.
“The only
problem is we will lose the Kansas delegation,” Mosiman said. Hope and the two
Kansas Young Republicans in the chat reacted with a laughing face to the
message. Hope did not respond to requests for comment. Mosiman declined to
comment.
Jipson
said the Young Republicans’ conversations reminded him of online discussions
between members of neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups.
“You say
it once or twice, it’s a joke, but you say it 251 times, it’s no longer a
joke,” Jipson said. “The more we repeat certain ideas, the more real they
become to us.”
Weeks
later, someone in the chat staying in a hotel asks its members to “GUESS WHAT
ROOM WE’RE IN.”
“1488,”
Dwyer responds. White supremacists use the number 1488 because 14 is the number
of words in the white supremacist slogan “We must secure the existence of our
people and a future for white children.” H is the eighth letter in the
alphabet, and 88 is often used as a shorthand for “Heil Hitler.”
In
another conversation in February, Giunta talks approvingly about the Orange
County Teenage Republican organization in New York — which appears to be part
of the network of national Teen Age Republicans — and how he was pleased with
its young members’ ideological bent.
“They
support slavery and all that shit. Mega based,” he said. The term “based” in
internet culture is used to express approval with an idea, often one that’s
bold or controversial.
In a
statement, Orange County GOP Chair Courtney Canfield Greene said the party was
disappointed to learn its teen group was mentioned in the chat.
“Our teen
volunteers have no affiliation with the NYSYR’s or the YRNF,” she said. “This
behavior has no home within the Republican Party in Orange County.”
Ed Cox,
the chair of the New York State GOP, also condemned the remarks made in the
chat.
“I was
shocked and disgusted to learn about the reports of comments made by a small
group of Young Republicans,” he said. “Just as we call out vile racist and
anti-Semetic rhetoric on the far left, we must not tolerate it within our
ranks.”
Vicious
words for enemies
Members
of the Telegram chat speak about their personal lives, too. Extensive
discussions about their everyday lives include one exchange about how devoutly
Catholic some chat members are and how often they attend church.
Many of
the slurs, epithets and violent language used in the chat often appear to be
intended as jokes.
Mosiman
was derided by members of the chat as “beaner” and “sp-c.”
“Stay in
the closet f----t,” Walker of New York also jested in July, though he is the
group’s main target for the same epithet.
The group
used slurs against Asians, too.
“My
people built the train tracks with the Chinese,” Walker says at one point,
referring to his Italian ancestors.
“Let his
people go!” Maligno responds. “Keep the ch--ks, though.”
In
another instance, Mosiman tells the group that, “The Spanish came to America
and had sex with every single woman.”
“Sex is
gay,” Dwyer writes.
“Sex? It
was rape,” Mosiman replies.
“Epic,”
Walker says.
LM
Joe did
you look it up yet
JM
Just did
Probably
shouldn’t have on my work computer 😂😂😂
🤣
RH
🤣
LM
AD
in reply
to
The
Spanish came to America and had sex with every single woman
Sex is
gay
LM
Sex?
It was
rape
BW
Epic
Texts and
reactions by: Luke Mosiman, Joe Maligno, Alex Dwyer, Bobby Walker, Rachel Hope.
There’s
more explicit malice in some phrases, too, especially when they turn their ire
on opponents outside the chat, such as the leader of the rival Grow YR slate,
Hayden Padgett, who defeated Giunta and was reelected chairman of the Young
Republican National Federation this summer.
“So you
mean Hayden F----t wrote the resolution himself?” Giunta asked the group about
the National Young Republicans chair in late May.
“RAPE
HAYDEN,” Mosiman declared the following month.
“Adolf
Padgette is in the F----tbunker as we speak,” Walker said in July.
Padgett
responded to the chat’s language in a statement.
“The
Young Republican National Federation condemns all forms of racism,
antisemitism, and hate,” Padgett said. “I want to be clear that such behavior
is entirely inconsistent with our values and has no place within our
organization or the broader conservative movement.”
Giunta
also had expletive-laden criticism for the Young Republicans in states that
were supporting or leaning toward Padgett’s faction.
“Minnesota
- f----ts,” he messaged, continuing: “Arkansas - inbred cow fuckers Nebraska -
revolt in our favor; blocked their bind and have a majority of their delegates
Maryland - fat stinky Jew … Rhode Island - traitorous c---s who I will
eradicate from the face of this planet.”
Giunta
also said he planned to make one of the competing Young Republicans “unalive
himself on the convention floor.”
In
another instance, Douglass, the Vermont state senator, describes to the group
members how one of Padgett’s Jewish colleagues may have made a procedural error
related to the number of Maryland delegates permitted at the national
convention.
“I was
about to say you’re giving nationals to [sic] much credit and expecting the Jew
to be honest,” Brianna Douglass, Sam’s wife and Vermont Young Republican’s
national committee member, replied to her husband’s message. Brianna Douglass
did not respond to repeated requests for comment.
‘If we
ever had a leak of this chat...’
While
reporting this article, POLITICO was examining a separate allegation: that
Giunta and the Young Republicans mismanaged the New York organization’s
finances and hadn’t paid at least one venue for a swanky holiday party it
hosted last year. POLITICO’s report detailed how the organization was missing
required financial disclosure forms and how their subsequent efforts to file
the forms revealed the organization was in more than $28,000 of debt. As of
Tuesday, updated records show the organization is in more than $38,000 of debt.
Donations
to New York State Young Republicans’ political account must be reported to the
state Board of Elections. Expenditures must be reported too.
At the
time, Giunta told POLITICO the allegations were “nothing more than a sad and
pathetic attempt at a political hit job.” But in their “RESTOREYR WAR ROOM”
chat, he and Walker speak flippantly about mishandling the club’s finances.
“NYSYR
Account be like: $500 - Balding cream $1,000 - Ozempik,” Walker said in one
message. “NYSYR will be declaring bankruptcy after this I just know it,” he
said in another.
“I
drained $10k tonight to pay for my next vacation to Italy,” Giunta appeared to
joke about the organization’s bank account.
“I spent
it on massage,” he says of another check that was deposited in the account.
“Great.
Can’t wait to get sued by our venue,” Walker replies.
Members
of the chat occasionally appeared to be aware of its toxicity and even made
remarks that considered the possibility someone outside their tight-knit group
could view it.
Walker
seemed to consider that possibility the most.
In one
instance, he joked about bombing the Young Republican National Federation’s
convention in Nashville and then remarked, “Just kidding for our assigned FBI
tracker.”
In
another, he considered the totality of the thousands of messages he and his
peers had written, and what would happen if the public saw them come to light.
“If we
ever had a leak of this chat we would be cooked fr fr,” he wrote.


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