
EXCLUSIVE: Thousands of leaked messages show leaders of Young Republican groups joking about gas chambers, slavery and rape in a private Telegram chat.Inside rising GOP leaders’ racist chats — obtained by POLITICO and spanning more than 7 months
2,900 pages of Telegram messages

«I’m ready to watch people burn now.»

The chats include messages such as «Everyone that votes no is going to the gas chamber,» and «I’m ready to watch people burn now,» attributed to Peter Giunta. Other exchanges record participants praising Nazi imagery with lines like «Great. I love Hitler.» Several members repeatedly used racial slurs in redacted form and referred to Black people as «the watermelon people.»
In one thread, a participant wrote «It was rape,» to which another replied «Epic.» There are also messages discussing tactics of harassment — «When do we start bullying dude?» — and references to inflicting «physiological torture» on rivals.
Two more members of a Young Republican group chat strewn with racist epithets and hateful jokes stepped down from their jobs Tuesday after we published an exclusive report on the Telegram exchanges.
«Everyone that votes no is going to the gas chamber.»
According to Politico, the fallout from the leaked Telegram group chat has already led to repercussions for several participants. William Hendrix, former vice chair of the Kansas Young Republicans, who repeatedly used racial slurs, is no longer employed at the Kansas Attorney General’s office. Bobby Walker, then head of the New York State Young Republicans, who referred to rape as «epic» in the leaked messages, was dropped from a congressional campaign. Peter Giunta, chair of the same organization, wrote that «everyone that votes no is going to the gas chamber.»

«Kids do stupid things»
-JD Vance
Both Walker and Michael Giunta apologized for their offensive messages but suggested the leaks were politically motivated, calling them part of a «character assassination» effort by members of the New York Young Republican Club.
Far from «kids»
Vice President JD Vance repeatedly defended the comments, minimizing the seriousness of the group chat’s content. Speaking on The Charlie Kirk Show podcast, he described the participants as «young boys,» saying that «kids do stupid things» and dismissing the messages as merely «edgy» and «offensive jokes.»

However, several of the group’s participants were far from «kids»: members of the Young Republican National Federation involved in the scandal ranged from 22 to 36 years old, including Peter Giunta, who is 31.
JD Vance downplayed bigoted messages found in Young Republicans’ group chats from our exclusive reporting, suggesting they were nothing more than “edgy, offensive jokes.”