Ramaswamy
Challenges Conservatives on Surging Bigotry on the Right
The
leading Republican candidate for Ohio governor is calling out his party for
rising intolerance, including against Indian American immigrants and their
children, like him.
Pooja
Salhotra
By Pooja
Salhotra
Dec. 19,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/19/us/politics/vivek-ramaswamy-anti-indian-hate.html
Vivek
Ramaswamy, the front-running Republican candidate for Ohio governor, challenged
a gathering of conservative activists in Arizona on Friday to denounce a rising
tide of bigotry on the political right and reject the idea that ancestry or
“heritage” defines what makes an American.
“The idea
that a ‘heritage American’ is more American than another American is
un-American at its core,” Mr. Ramaswamy, a wealthy entrepreneur and candidate
for the presidency in 2024, told an audience at AmericaFest, a conservative
conference organized by Turning Point USA, the organization founded by the
slain activist Charlie Kirk.
He added,
“The online comment threads of Twitter might preach that our lineage is our
strength. No, I’m sorry, our lineage is not our strength. Our true strength is
what unites us across that diversity and through that lineage.”
Mr.
Ramaswamy, who shaped his political identity with a series of books and media
appearances denouncing left-wing “woke” ideology, has become perhaps the most
visible target of a right-wing ideology — sometimes labeled “blood and soil”
nationalism, a Nazi slogan that was used in Germany and has resurfaced among
white supremacists globally. It is a worldview shaped by intolerance of
immigrants, and those from India are one of the latest targets.
“Older
Republicans who may doubt the rising prevalence of the blood-and-soil view
should think again,” he wrote in an opinion article in The New York Times this
week. “My social media feeds are littered with hundreds of slurs, most from
accounts that I don’t recognize,” he wrote.
He went
further on Friday, saying that people who cannot denounce hateful ideas toward
any ethnic group “without stuttering” do not have a “place as a leader at any
level in the conservative movement.”
In recent
weeks, mainstream conservatism has been rocked by a series of incidents that
have highlighted bigotry within its ranks. In mid-October, flagrantly racist,
antisemitic and homophobic texts exchanged by young Republicans came to light.
Weeks later, the conservative commentator Tucker Carlson, who remains close to
President Trump and Vice President JD Vance, sat down for a friendly interview
with Nick Fuentes, an openly racist and antisemitic white nationalist.
When the
president of the Heritage Foundation, Kevin Roberts, released a video refusing
to criticize Mr. Carlson, senior officials and board members at the
conservative think tank resigned in protest.
Now, Mr.
Ramaswamy is highlighting a new pressure point facing his party, surging
intolerance toward Indian Americans.
“This is
deeply personal to me,” he said in a text to The Times. “It isn’t really about
defending Jews, Indians, or any other minority group. It’s about defending the
essence of America itself.”
Corbin
Wills, 25, a student at Arizona Christian University who attended AmericaFest,
called Mr. Ramaswamy “a great leader in the conservative movement” and said he
appreciated Mr. Ramaswamy’s unequivocal denunciation of Mr. Fuentes. “The party
is going to fall to the wayside if we let these outspoken lunatics drive
things. It’s just ugly right now,” he said.
Others,
like Joe Donnelly, 66, who traveled from New Jersey to attend the conference
with his 26-year-old daughter, Jess, were less certain about Mr. Ramaswamy’s
hard-line approach.
“Do I
agree with Nick Fuentes? No. But he’ll expose himself,” he said. “You let
people talk and expose themselves and the party will naturally move away from
him.”
But
derogatory slurs that were once seen only in extreme, right-wing pockets of the
internet are becoming more mainstream, as are claims that Indians are “stealing
American jobs,” according to organizations tracking online hate.
“The
hateful rhetoric we are seeing right now is nothing like we have seen before,”
said Raqib Hameed Naik, the executive director of the Washington D.C.-based
Center for the Study of Organized Hate, a nonprofit that tracks online
extremism.
Mr.
Ramaswamy spotlighted that surge this week when he revealed the anti-Indian
slurs dogging his campaign for governor and argued in The New York Times
article that being an American has nothing to do with one’s ancestry. Instead,
he said, any U.S. citizen who vows allegiance to the country is an American so
long as they “believe in the rule of law, in freedom of conscience and freedom
of expression, in colorblind meritocracy, in the U.S. Constitution, in the
American dream.”
That was
a direct challenge to “national conservatism,” whose adherents include
prominent Republicans, including Mr. Vance, who gave a speech this summer in
which he worried that if being an American meant simply adhering to an ideal,
“let’s say, of the Declaration of Independence,” American identity “would
include hundreds of millions, maybe billions, of foreign citizens.”
“At the
same time,” the vice president continued, defining citizenship purely as
adhering to the principles of the nation’s founding documents would exclude
many on the right who don’t subscribe to those principles and whose “own
ancestors were here at the time of the Revolutionary War.”
In his
opinion article, Mr. Ramaswamy took what seemed to be a veiled shot at Mr.
Vance, who responded in October to outrage over the young Republicans’ racist
texts by saying, “I refuse to join the pearl clutching.”
“The
point isn’t to clutch pearls,” Mr. Ramaswamy wrote, “but to prevent the gradual
legitimization of this un-American animus,” condemning a “reluctance from my
former anti-woke peers to criticize the new identity politics on the right.”
Far from
sparking introspection, Mr. Ramaswamy’s piece flushed out the bigotry he
condemned. Mr. Fuentes said on social media that “foreigners who have no right
to be here don’t get to lecture me about what it is to be American.”
Andrew
Torba, the founder of Gab, a social media hotbed for intolerance, said in a
more-than-2,000 word response that the notion that anyone could become an
American is “the most destructive lie ever told about American identity.”
Anti-immigrant
rhetoric, including against South Asians, is not new. But it surged in 2024,
when the presidential cycle for the first time featured two Indian American
candidates, Mr. Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley, and a Black and South Asian
Democratic nominee in Kamala Harris.
Mr.
Vance’s wife, Usha, an Indian American and practicing Hindu, has become a
particular target, said Stephanie Chan, director of data and research for Stop
AAPI Hate, a group that monitors and responds to anti-Asian discrimination. A
fierce debate within the Trump administration this year over visas for highly
skilled immigrant workers sparked still more anti-Indian rhetoric.
Posts on
X that featured anti-Indian slurs, stereotypes or narratives like “deport
Indians” garnered 280 million views over about two months earlier this year,
Mr. Naik’s group found. Over the last month, he said, another 29,000 mentions
of such language has appeared on X, which Elon Musk purchased in 2022.
Mr.
Ramaswamy is among a small contingent of conservatives who say the movement
needs to protect itself from fringe ideologies like that of Mr. Fuentes’
groypers.
Ben
Shapiro, a conservative commentator, warned in a speech to the Heritage
Foundation this week that “if conservatives do not stand up and draw lines,
conservatism and the dream of America itself will cease to exist.”
According
to a recent survey from the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank,
almost a third of Republicans under the age of 50 openly express racist or
antisemitic views, a finding based on a poll of about 2,800 mostly Republican
voters.
Manjusha
Kulkarni, executive director of Stop AAPI Hate, said the anti-Indian rhetoric
has been driven partly by policies of Mr. Trump, such his moves to limit H-1B
visas, a program that has historically allowed 85,000 skilled workers, the vast
majority of whom are Indian nationals, to work in the United States each year.
“It’s
essentially about collective punishment against communities based on perceived
threats,” she said.
Indian
Americans have become the largest subgroup within the Asian American population
among people who identify with one country of origin, and are on average the
wealthiest and most educated. Six members of Congress are of Indian origin as
is the newly elected mayor of New York City, Zohran Mamdani, who also faced
significant vitriol online targeting his identity as a Uganda-born Muslim of
Indian descent.
“There’s
never been a prouder moment to be an Indian American,” Representative Ro
Khanna, Democrat of California, said. Mr. Khanna, who said he has been targeted
online because of his heritage, applauded Mr. Ramaswamy for denouncing the
forces of intolerance instead of “pandering” to them.
Mr.
Ramaswamy made the leap from business to politics by denouncing “wokeness” — a
vaguely defined term many Republicans use to describe what they see as a
liberal policing of speech involving minority groups.
With
books, media appearances and a presidential campaign, he amplified the issue of
“wokeism” and encouraged a backlash. But in his Times essay, he lamented what
he called a natural consequence of that backlash: more people celebrating what
they see as a historical bond of white people to America’s founding.
Earlier
this year, Mr. Vance delivered a speech at the Claremont Institute, a
conservative think-tank, in which he painted America in starkly different terms
than Mr. Ramaswamy. “I think that people whose ancestors fought in the Civil
War have a hell of a lot more claim over America than the people who say they
don’t belong,” he said.
Representative
Pramila Jayapal, Democrat of Washington, said she has been a target of
anti-immigrant sentiment and that attacks have increased during her nearly nine
years in Congress. She recalled conversations from two decades ago with
immigrants employed at Microsoft who she said at that time felt somewhat immune
from ostracism because of their status. Now, she said, immigrants like them
feel vulnerable.
“People
understand this is an attack on all of us,” she said, “as Indian Americans, as
immigrants, as naturalized citizens.”
Nathan
Taylor Pemberton contributed reporting.
Pooja
Salhotra covers breaking news across the United States.


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