In leaked texts, Young Republicans praise Hitler, joke about rape, slavery


Summary

Leaked racist messages

According to Politico, members of the Young Republicans, including leaders from multiple states, were implicated in a Telegram group chat that contained violent, racist and white supremacist messages.

Consequences and resignations

Following the release of the messages, at least three members of the Young Republicans lost their jobs or had job offers rescinded.

Apologies and claims of manipulation

Some individuals named in the leaked messages, including Peter Giunta and Bobby Walker, issued apologies for the offensive language but raised questions about the sources of the leak and potential manipulation.


Full story

At least three members of the Young Republicans have either lost their jobs or have had a job offer rescinded following the leak of violent, racist messages from a Telegram group. The messages expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler, joked about rape and slavery and advocated for sending opponents to gas chambers.

The group chat included members of Young Republican organizations across the country, as well as a Vermont state senator. Politico obtained the chats, which took place over the course of seven months.

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While the release of the texts has prompted widespread outrage, Vice President JD Vance wrote on social media that he would “refuse to join the pearl clutching” over the content of the messages.

The texts were leaked at a time when both well-known figures and everyday Americans are facing consequences for what is deemed hateful speech. The trend accelerated after the September killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Teachers, firefighters, journalists, military members and others have lost jobs over comments that criticized Kirk or celebrated his death. 

What were the messages?

On Tuesday, Politico reported that nine members of the conservative group were involved in the racist, violent messages. 

The messages referred to Black people as monkeys and “the watermelon people” and talked about sending their political opponents to gas chambers. The group also spoke about raping their enemies and praised Republicans who they believed supported slavery. 

William Hendrix, who was the vice chair of the Kansas Young Republicans, used variations of racial slurs more than a dozen times, according to Politico. Peter Giunta, who was the chair of the New York Young Republicans, wrote in June that “everyone that votes no is going to the gas chamber.” Giunta was referring to a vote for state chair, which he later won. 

“Im going to create some of the greatest physiological torture methods known to man,” he also wrote. “We only want true believers.”

Other members of the New York Young Republicans responded, including the former general counsel Joe Maligno and national committee member Annie Kaykaty. 

“Can we fix the showers?” Maligno wrote. “Gas chambers don’t fit the Hitler aesthetic.”

“I’m ready to watch people burn now,” Kaykaty replied.

Many of the texts also included white supremacist messaging. 

In one message, a person who was staying in a hotel asked the group, “GUESS WHAT ROOM WE’RE IN.” Alex Dwyer, the former chair of the Kansas Young Republicans, replied, “1488.” White supremacists use that number 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 white supremacists often use 88 as a shorthand for “Heil Hitler.” 

In another text chain, Dwyer informed Giunta that one of Michigan’s Young Republicans had promised to vote for the most right-wing person to lead the national group. 

“Great,” Giunta said. “I love Hitler.”

Dwyer reacted to that message with a smiley face.

Luke Mosiman, who was the chair of the Kansas Young Republicans, asked if the New Yorkers in the group were watching an NBA playoff game. Giunta responded, saying, “I’d go to the zoo if I wanted to watch monkey play ball.” 

Hendrix made similar racist remarks. “Bro is at a chicken restaurant ordering his food,” he wrote. “Would he like some watermelon and kool aid with that?”

Have there been any consequences?

Since the release of the messages, several members have lost their jobs, but it remains unclear whether they have resigned from their roles in the Young Republicans.

Giunta lost his job working for New York Assemblyman Mike Reilly, according to the Republican state lawmaker. A spokesperson for the New York State Unified Court System said Maligno is no longer an employee.

Vermont State Sen. Sam Douglass has also received calls to resign, including from Vermont Republican Gov. Phil Scott. Douglass and his wife made racist remarks about Indian people and wrote antisemitic comments

Kansas’ Young Republicans shut down after Politico’s story was published. The chairman of the Kansas Republican Party confirmed the immediate deactivation of the group due to the text leak. Hendrix was also fired from a communications job in Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach’s office.

“The comments in the chat are inexcusable,” Kobach said. “As soon as the office learned of those messages, Will Hendrix’s employment was terminated.”

What has been the reaction?

The majority of the reaction has been bipartisan, with members of Congress from both sides expressing dismay at the messages. The board of directors of the National Young Republicans said every member of the chat must resign from the organization. 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called the chat “revolting” and “disgusting.” 

However, others have declined to repudiate the comments.

Vice President JD Vance wrote on X Tuesday that recently revealed texts from Jay Jones, the Democratic nominee for Virginia attorney general, were “far worse.” 

On Oct. 3, the National Review reported on a 2022 text thread between Jones and Republican state lawmaker Carrie Coyner, in which Jones said that if he had two bullets and the opportunity to shoot a group of three people –– then-Virginia House Speaker Todd Gilbert, Hitler or Pol Pot –– he would use both bullets on Gilbert “every time.”

Have those in the messages responded?

Many of the people implicated in the Young Republican message leak have declined to comment. However, both Giunta and Bobby Walker, who was chair of the New York Young Republicans, apologized for the messages but questioned whether someone had altered them. They also blamed the release on the New York Young Republican Club, which is often at odds with the Young Republicans, according to Politico. 

“I am so sorry to those offended by the insensitive and inexcusable language,” Giunta said. “These logs were sourced by way of extortion and provided to POLITICO by the very same people conspiring against me in what appears to be a highly-coordinated year-long character assassination led by Gavin Wax and the New York City Young Republican Club.”

Walker similarly said that there was “no excuse for the language and tone in messages attributed to me” before apologizing. 

“It’s troubling that private exchanges were obtained and released in a way clearly intended to inflict harm,” he said. “The circumstances raise real questions about accuracy and motive but none of that excuses the language. This has been a painful lesson about judgment and trust.”

Alan Judd (Content Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The leak of racist and violent messages from a Young Republicans group has led to job losses, resignations, and widespread condemnation, highlighting the repercussions of hateful speech and debates over accountability in political organizations.

Hate speech and accountability

The exposure of racist and violent language has resulted in firings and organizational shutdowns, underlining societal and professional intolerance for hate speech and the growing expectation of accountability for private conduct.

Political polarization

Reactions to the leaked messages show divisions within and between political parties, with some leaders condemning the behavior and others dismissing the outrage, which reflects ongoing polarization over issues of speech and partisanship.

Consequences of leaked communication

The incident demonstrates the impact of leaked private messages on public careers and reputations, raising questions about privacy, the permanence of digital communication, and the motives behind such exposures.

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Behind the numbers

Politico obtained 2,900 pages of group chat messages exchanged over seven months, involving roughly a dozen Young Republican leaders. The Young Republican National Federation claims 15,000 members aged 18–40 across the U.S. and Puerto Rico.

Community reaction

Local Republican leaders in Kansas and Vermont called for implicated individuals to resign and in Kansas the Young Republicans chapter was made inactive. Community and party members widely expressed shock and disappointment over the incident.

Policy impact

The most immediate impact has been internal: disbanding of the Kansas chapter, resignations or firings, and calls for further accountability within the Young Republican National Federation, but there is no evidence of wider policy changes as a result.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

Media landscape

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106 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • The Kansas Young Republicans organization was deactivated following a report by Politico revealing its members engaged in racist and violent chat messages.
  • Kansas Republican Party Chairman Kris Kobach stated that the comments made by members of the organization are inexcusable and do not reflect the values of Kansas Republicans.
  • Members of the chats made offensive statements, including using racial slurs and discussing violence against political opponents, as reported by Politico.
  • Gov. Kathy Hochul demanded accountability from GOP leaders regarding their members' behavior.

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Key points from the Center

  • Young Republicans face calls to resign from party roles due to racist, antisemitic and misogynistic comments revealed in leaked chat messages reported by Politico.
  • The Young Republicans National Federation's board condemned the language revealed, labeling it as vile and inexcusable, according to their official statement.
  • Kansas GOP Chair Danedri Herbert stated that party leadership is disgusted by the comments made by young Kansas Republicans mentioned in the Politico story.
  • Concerns are growing about political polarization and inflammatory speech following the assassination of Charlie Kirk on September 10.

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Key points from the Right

  • Leaked messages from the Young Republican National Federation included racist, antisemitic, and misogynistic comments, as reported by Politico.
  • Multiple group members lost their jobs or were pressured to resign after the scandal emerged, including Peter Giunta.
  • New York Gov. Kathy Hochul denounced the hateful messages and criticized Congressperson Elise Stefanik for previous support of the group.
  • The Young Republican National Federation condemned the hateful remarks, calling them disgraceful and unacceptable.

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