US House speaker denounces racist Young Republicans texts, but denies larger issue
VP Vance dismisses ‘to the gas chambers,’ ‘fat, stinky Jew’ leaked messages — sent by party activists in their 20s and 30s — as ‘young boys’ telling ‘edgy, offensive jokes’

US House Speaker Mike Johnson said Thursday that Republicans “roundly condemn” a leaked group chat in which Young Republican officials joked about gas chambers, praised Adolf Hitler and used racist, antisemitic and homophobic slurs.
However, when asked whether he feared extremist or pro-Hitler views among young Republicans, Johnson replied, “No.”
“Obviously, that is not the principles of the Republican Party. We stand for the founding principles of America,” Johnson said in a press conference. “We have stood against that. We fought the Nazis. We roundly condemn it, and anybody in any party who espouses it, we’re opposing that.”
Johnson’s remarks capped two days of intensifying fallout from a Politico exposé that published thousands of messages exchanged over months by rising Republican operatives around the country.
In the cache reviewed by Politico, participants wrote, “Everyone that votes no is going to the gas chamber,” “Great. I love Hitler,” and traded demeaning references to Black people, Jews and LGBTQ people.
State and local leaders appeared in the chat, including one Vermont state senator. The revelations have already cost several participants their jobs and prompted the deactivation of the Kansas Young Republicans chapter, with the Young Republican National Federation itself calling for implicated officials to “immediately resign from all positions” within the organization.
Civil rights attorney Leo Terrell, who heads the Trump administration’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism, reacted by saying: “Antisemitism on the right is just as dangerous as antisemitism on the left.”
Meanwhile, US Vice President JD Vance has sought to downplay the severity of the situation.
Vance posted on X with a screenshot of texts in which Jay Jones, a former Democratic nominee for Virginia attorney general, suggested a prominent Republican deserved “two bullets to the head.”
“This is far worse than anything said in a college group chat, and the guy who said it could become the AG of Virginia,” Vance wrote. “I refuse to join the pearl clutching when powerful people call for political violence.”
Vance later said in an interview on “The Charlie Kirk Show,” “The reality is that kids do stupid things. Especially young boys, they tell edgy, offensive jokes. Like, that’s what kids do. And I really don’t want us to grow up in a country where a kid telling a stupid joke — telling a very offensive, stupid joke — is the cause of ruining their lives.”
Eight of the 11 participants in the group chat range from ages 24-35, according to a Mother Jones report, which could not determine the ages of the remaining three.
This is far worse than anything said in a college group chat, and the guy who said it could become the AG of Virginia. I refuse to join the pearl clutching when powerful people call for political violence. pic.twitter.com/kV57Wq7BLG
— JD Vance (@JDVance) October 14, 2025
Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, praised Republican leaders who condemned the messages, which he called “offensive and very concerning.”
“I’m also glad that many leaders, including @EliseStefanik and @RepMikeLawler, spoke out strongly and swiftly against these hateful statements,” Greenblatt wrote on X.
California Governor Gavin Newsom urged Congress to investigate the scope of extremist sentiment within Republican-aligned youth networks, arguing that the chat logs were “neither fringe nor humorous.” In a letter to the House Oversight Committee chair, Newsom contrasted GOP scrutiny of campus antisemitism with what he characterized as muted responses to hate inside party infrastructure.
Antisemitic streamer on group chat: ‘Yeah, we like Hitler’
At the same time, Myron Gaines, co-host of the popular podcast “Fresh and Fit,” which is known for frequently airing antisemitic content, defended the leaked group chat.
“Yeah, we like Hitler. No one gives a f–k what you woke jews think anymore,” wrote Gaines, whose real name is Amrou Fudl, in a post on X Wednesday replying to a post by progressive commentator David Pakman, who is Jewish, decrying Vance’s defense of the group chat.
“Bro was a revolutionary leader and saved germany,” Gaines’ post continued. “The jews declared war on Germany first. If can israel deny a genocide with 4k video proof, I’m questjoning [sic] everything you guys have said about the painter during WW2.”
Like many products of the conservative “Manosphere,” Gaines’ podcast, which he co-hosts with Walter Weekes and has over 1.5 million subscribers on YouTube, centers on misogynistic views about dating and gender roles. It has also increasingly embraced antisemitic conspiracy theories.
Meanwhile, as reactions to the Politico exposé were building up, a separate controversy ricocheted through the Capitol: A photograph circulating online showed a swastika integrated into the stripes of an American flag displayed in a Republican lawmaker’s office.
Capitol Police opened an investigation after US Rep. Dave Taylor called the image “vile and deeply inappropriate” and suggested it was the result of vandalism.
Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.
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