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  • Michigan GOP leaders mostly quiet after racist, pro-Hitler messages surface from Young Republicans group chat – Detroit Metro Times

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    A vile group chat among Young Republican leaders across the country that included antisemitic and racist messages obtained and published by Politico has led to some members losing their jobs and others distancing themselves from the remarks.

    The Michigan Young Republicans chapter was mentioned in the report. In one exchange, Kansas Young Republicans Chair Laken Dwyer told national Vice Chair Anthony Giunta Michigan’s Young Republicans pledged to “vote for the most right wing person” to lead the organization.

    “Great. I love Hitler,” Giunta replied.

    Dwyer reacted with a smiley face.

    Neither the Michigan Young Republicans nor the Michigan Republican Party responded to Politico’s reporting, which exposed numerous slurs and references to Nazism, white supremacy, and violence. Other messages called Black people “monkeys” and “watermelon people,” and mused about putting political opponents in gas chambers.

    But Krish Mathrani, youth chair of the Michigan Republican Party, condemned the comments in a statement posted Tuesday on X.

    “I am deeply disturbed and outraged by the contents of the leaked Young Republicans group chat messages,” Mathrani, whose parents emigrated from India to the U.S., wrote. “These messages — filled with racist epithets, antisemitic conspiracies, references to praise of Hitler, and dehumanizing language — are grotesque and must be denounced.”

    He added that Republicans “expressions of extremism and bigotry must be repudiated.”

    Mathrani continued, “Our institutions must adopt rigorous vetting and education to ensure this ideology never takes root again. Every Republican, every conservative leader, and every person of conscience must condemn this publicly and immediately.”

    That didn’t happen. In fact, when the National Young Republicans issued a statement denouncing the “vile and inexcusable language,” other conservatives responded with their own brand of hate. 

    “Stop being giant pussies,” Mike Davis, a former Republican Senate Judiciary Committee staffer and founder and president of the Article III Project (A3P), a group created to advance conservative judicial appointments, wrote on X. “Stop playing by the left’s rules. When Democrats force out Virginia AG candidate Jay Jones for his violent threats, then I’ll start pretending to care about banter among college students.”

    The message was retweeted by Meshawn Maddock, former co-chair of the Michigan Republican Party and wife of state Rep. Matt Maddock. She endorsed Mathrani’s run for youth chair. 

    Even Mathrani’s own social media posts raise questions about his role in spreading hate. 

    On Aug. 23, he posted a message on X reading “Hog on a hog” alongside photos of U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens, a Democrat running for U.S. Senate, posing on a Harley motorcycle. He has frequently retweeted far-right figures such as Stephen Miller, the Trump adviser who helped craft the administration’s Muslim ban, family-separation policy, and other hard-line immigration measures. Mathrani has also shared transphobic remarks, including one from television host Nancy Grace on June 1 that read, “As for the gender benders and groomers, now is as good a time as ever to go touch some grass and come back to planet earth. The rest of us are done playing make-believe.”

    When one X user noted that Meshawn Maddock hadn’t denounced the leaked messages, Maddock responded simply, “BLAH.” Maddock is known for her incendiary rhetoric, booing Black Lives Matter demonstrators, and bussing Trumpers to the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

    Metro Times couldn’t immediately reach Michigan’s Young Republicans or the Michigan Republican Party for comment.

    The Young Republicans is an organization for members of the U.S. Republican Party between the ages of 18 and 40 that assists conservative political candidates and causes.


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    Steve Neavling

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  • “Be like Charlie”: Slain activist Kirk focus of Republican youth conference’s first night

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    THE WOODLANDS — Thousands gathered Friday night to kick off a conference of young Republicans in which Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist killed last week, was memorialized as a “martyr” whose death is galvanizing youths across the nation.

    Speaker after speaker, from state lawmakers to influential MAGA cultural tastemakers, shared stories at the Texas Youth Summit about how Kirk — who began rallying young conservatives as a teenager — made them and others feel like their Christian-guided views mattered and their perspectives were shared by many.

    They called him a “hero,” “miracle,” and “martyr for Christ.” Amid the mourning, they said that the fight Kirk had embarked on was far from over but one that could be won by the young people in attendance.

    And it appeared, according to some of the speakers, that more people were learning Kirk’s name and his vision for a faith-led American future every day since his death.

    The speeches caused roars of applause from the mostly young audience, some wearing white t-shirts that said “We are Charlie,” which glowed in front of bright red and blue stage lights.

    “Be like Charlie,” Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, the final speaker of the night, told the crowd, which had thinned by the time he took the stage past 10 p.m. but was still several hundred strong. The state’s junior senator recounted how he texted Kirk upon hearing about the shooting, asking if he was OK.

    “I’m praying for you right now,” Cruz said he texted, adding: “Obviously, I never got an answer.”

    Kirk was killed Sept. 10 while speaking at a Utah university, the first stop of his group’s “The American Comeback” tour. He often debated students who disagreed with him on his tours while firing up young conservatives.

    “There’s a lot of value in a bunch of young conservatives coming together and (feeling) like they’re not alone. Charlie created that environment — single handedly,” U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Houston said in a video that was played. “No one else did that kind of thing.”

    U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, recounted at the Texas Youth Summit on Friday how he texted Charlie Kirk upon hearing about the shooting, asking if he was OK. Credit: Mark Felix for The Texas Tribune

    The memorial was just the latest instance of Texans gathering to share their sorrow over Kirk’s death. Vigils at college campuses, town squares and churches have drawn thousands, with speakers and attendees saying Kirk changed how they viewed politics, debating and their own beliefs. Others vehemently opposed what Kirk stood for but attended the homages to condemn his killing as an unacceptable act of political violence.

    “We weren’t alive for JFK or MLK, and this is the first big assassination,” said Harley Reed, one of more than 1,000 who gathered last week at Texas A&M for one such candlelight vigil. “This is the first big movement, if you will, that we’ve seen interrupted in a way.”

    Also grieving publicly are the state’s leaders, including some Republicans who are set to speak at the conference on Saturday. Some have also urged a close examination of reactions to Kirk’s death from educators and students; Gov. Greg Abbott, for one, has called for the expulsion of students who publicly celebrated Kirk’s death, prompting blowback from critics who say such calls run afoul of the First Amendment’s free speech protections.

    Such scrutiny has done little to slow the momentum that’s erupted among conservative youth who just became old enough to vote or will reach the threshold in time for next year’s midterms.

    Turning Point USA, the group Kirk launched as an 18-year-old to organize other young conservatives, said it received an explosion of more than 50,000 requests to establish new chapters at colleges and high schools in the days after its founder’s death.

    In Texas, where the GOP has dominated state government for longer than current college-age students have been alive, organizers of this weekend’s youth summit said they anticipated record-breaking attendance after getting an influx of interest leading up to the event.

    “Charlie Kirk cannot be replaced,” Christian Collins, the summit’s founder and leader, said Friday night. “But what I will say is, what will happen in this community, and in this country, is thousands of Charlie Kirks will rise up.”

    Houston, Texas: People raise their hands while singing during the Texas Youth Summit on September 19, 2025 in The Woodlands, Texas.

    Attendees raise their hands while singing during the Texas Youth Summit, where thousands gathered Friday night to kick off a conference of young Republicans in which Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist killed last week, was remembered by speakers. Credit: Mark Felix for The Texas Tribune

    The event was another example of how Kirk’s death has invigorated a growing movement of young conservatives nationwide, and added fuel to efforts from Texas’ GOP leaders to turn the red state an even deeper shade of red.

    State GOP leaders and lawmakers have pointed to that outburst of interest and solidarity as evidence of a Christian awakening among the state’s youth that they say will only grow stronger and usher in a new culture in America.

    While the state’s leading young Republican organizations were once lukewarm on Trump, the voter bloc they represent proved crucial to Trump’s victory last year throughout the country.

    The president has reportedly said that was thanks, in large part, to Kirk’s work.


    Three featured TribFest speakers confirmed! You don’t want to miss ​​Deb Haaland, former U.S. Secretary of the Interior and 2026 Democratic candidate for New Mexico governor; state Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston and 2026 Republican candidate for Texas Attorney General; and Jake Tapper, anchor of CNN’s “The Lead” and “State of the Union” at the 15th annual Texas Tribune Festival, Nov. 13–15 in downtown Austin. Get your tickets today!

    TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase.

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  • Column: Newsom and DeSantis have the spotlight, but they don’t have a chance. Harris and Haley might

    Column: Newsom and DeSantis have the spotlight, but they don’t have a chance. Harris and Haley might

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    The culmination of the Newsom-DeSantis bromance is upon us, the mano a mano matchup of two governors who depend on each other to whip up the kind of polarizing frenzy that feeds headlines and advances careers.

    They will hold a debate Thursday night on Fox News, moderated by far-right provocateur Sean Hannity, an event that has been hyped so much you’d be forgiven for thinking the stakes were high, that this made-for-television stunt actually matters.

    Which, of course, it does not.

    “It’s political theater in its most ridiculous form,” Mindy Romero told me. She’s the director of the Center for Inclusive Democracy at the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy. “This doesn’t benefit the voters.”

    If we wanted something substantial, something that might change the results of the next election, we’d put Republican hopeful Nikki Haley in the room with Vice President Kamala Harris — two daughters of immigrants (Haley is South Asian, Harris is mixed-race, South Asian and Black) with differing views of America but the shared ability to reach apathetic and disenfranchised voters. But I’ll get to that.

    While the spectacle of Newsom and DeSantis going at each other may provide zingers and red-blue outrage, it is unlikely to sway voters because neither man is an actual contender for anything.

    DeSantis’ presidential campaign is sinking, and not even platform shoes can keep his head above water. Even in the unlikely circumstance that he humiliated Newsom with an unexpected bout of superior wit and grasp of fact, it wouldn’t make up for his fundraising problems, falling poll numbers or the orange elephant in the room, Donald Trump, who is leaps and bounds ahead of any other Republican contenders when it comes to dedicated voters.

    Then there is Newsom, who is absolutely, positively not running for president, though his team has put together a surprisingly successful and smart campaign to position him as a Biden surrogate, ready to step in if needed. And, as I have said before, I appreciate Newsom speaking out, and taking action, on issues including reproductive freedom.

    The problem is he’s not needed, this time around, anyway.

    And so, we have spectacle without substance when it comes to the Newsom-DeSantis drama. As the first female British prime minister Margaret Thatcher put it in 1965, “If you want something said, ask a man; if you want something done, ask a woman.”

    Or as Romero said, “Isn’t that what we always see, two male politicians louder and bolder, taking the spotlight from women of color? I am not surprised by this at all.”

    It may not be surprising, but it is concerning to see that spotlight in the wrong place.

    The presidential election is going to be close. The votes on the margins will likely decide whether Biden holds the Oval Office or not. Key among those iffy ballots, for both parties, are younger people and voters of color.

    Those are votes that Harris and Haley are well-positioned to earn — but also ones that, if left unattended, could cost the race for either side.

    If Americans under the age of 45 vote at the same rate as they did in 2020, a recent Brookings Institute poll found, they will account for more than one-third of the electorate.

    But young voters are not happy.

    Young Republicans have a generational split over access to abortions. Nearly three-fourths of adults under age 30 say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, according to a 2022 Pew Research poll. The Brookings poll found 47% of Republicans ages 18 to 44 voiced similar opinions.

    In the past few weeks, Haley has gained momentum and won critical support in positioning herself as a post-MAGA candidate — even attempting, not always successfully, to find a less strident way to speak about abortion while still supporting bans.

    Recently, Haley earned a critical endorsement from the conservative grassroots organization Americans for Prosperity Action, which was co-founded by billionaire Charles Koch and comes with not only money, but the political machine to back it up.

    Her rallies are drawing bigger crowds and her poll numbers show that in places where DeSantis’ numbers are slipping, she is gaining.

    She’s still nowhere close to being a real challenger to Trump, but she is offering up a path forward for Republicans who want a Trump-lite government, all the conservatism without the overt turn toward authoritarianism. Anything that pulls Republicans away from straight-up fascism should be considered significant, particularly as DeSantis tries to out-Trump Trump with anti-everything policies targeting history, LGBTQ+ communities, Disneyland and more.

    For Democrats, the problem with young voters, especially people of color, is apparent around the Biden administration’s response to the fighting in Israel and Gaza. His administration, even with its commitment to climate change, gun control and economic priorities such as canceling student loan debt, seems out of touch.

    About 70% of people 18 to 34 disapprove of Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war, an NBC News poll found. Many of those young progressives see the Palestinian cause as linked to social justice issues for communities of color in the United States.

    Dov Waxman, director of the UCLA Y&S Nazarian Center for Israel Studies, said he believes the anger of those young progressives may fade by the 2024 elections, but their apathy may still keep them from voting.

    Biden “has kind of a broader, deeper problem with younger voters and certainly this has exacerbated it,” Waxman said.

    Adrianne Shropshire, executive director of BlackPAC, which helps organize Black voters, said Harris is critical to countering that apathy, and is “uniquely positioned in many ways because of her identities,” to reach disaffected groups.

    Despite endless attacks that Harris faces from Republicans (and even from within her own party), which often use the prospect of a Harris presidency as a kind of threat, “there is a real connection she makes with Black voters,” Shropshire said.

    And though she faces a relentless narrative that she is unlikable, as Hillary Clinton did, the idea that she might be kicked off the ticket in favor of someone more palatable such as Newsom is a non-starter — a disastrous misread of voters of color, young, progressive voters and women.

    “They’re not going to dump her. They can’t dump her,” Dan Morain told me. He’s the author of the definitive biography on Harris, “Kamala’s Way,” and has chronicled her career since she was a lowly prosecutor.

    Instead, Morain, Shropshire and others said the administration needs to better use her identity and skills in the next campaign cycle, leaning into who she is — leaning into who voters are.

    “You just look at Harris and what she does, She’s just she is more attuned to younger people than [Biden] ever will be,” Morain said.

    And so we have two interesting women, closer to the Oval Office than either Newsom or DeSantis will likely be anytime soon (though I’d give Newsom a shot in 2028).

    Haley and Harris are both seasoned, tough survivors who have more in common with most American voters — who are increasingly not white, much to the chagrin of some — but who are stymied by their sex as has been every woman who has ever run for office.

    Trump has nicknamed Haley “birdbrain.” Harris’ laugh has been described as a “cackle.”

    But Newsom and DeSantis are, as Hannity put it, are “two heavyweights” who are “stepping into a war.”

    They definitely have something that Harris and Haley lack, but it’s not a shot at the presidency.

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    Anita Chabria

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