The coalition of college Republicans who helped propel Donald Trump back into office is fracturing as rival campus organizations increasingly invite white nationalist speakers — creating internal conflict that threatens GOP efforts to mobilize young voters in critical midterm races.
According to the New York Times, the schism came into sharper focus when Maryland's state college Republican group invited white nationalist Jared Taylor to speak at Salisbury University, where he warned that white people face extinction.
Blake Ruszala, finance chair for the University of Maryland's college Republicans chapter, said his organization has been damaged by hosting Taylor.
"It's going to hurt all of us. We've lost people wanting to affiliate with us," Ruszala told the Times.
The Maryland conflict reflects a broader divide consuming college Republican groups across the country. Campus organizations at Harvard, Georgetown, the University of Illinois, and the University of Florida have all been tied to racist speakers, extremist rhetoric, or inflammatory social media postings.
According to the report, the nation's fastest-growing college Republican organization, the College Republicans of America (CRA), recently appointed Kai Schwemmer as political director — a move that alarmed some state leaders due to Schwemmer's documented ties to white nationalist Nick Fuentes.
Riley McArdle, chairman of the College Republican Federation of Alabama, said his group had been considering affiliating with the College Republicans of America but grew unsettled by Schwemmer's appointment.
"What I have seen on him has been pretty alarming. I don't want to go total Groyper, which is what the Nick Fuentes followers call themselves," McArdle told the Times' Stephanie Saul.
As midterms approach, Republican leaders worry that internal conflicts among college Republicans will weaken party effectiveness in mobilizing young voters — particularly young men whose turnout is essential to GOP success.
In Maryland, gubernatorial candidate Shannon Wright objected to hosting the white nationalist speaker, stating: "This is not representative of the Republican Party."
In February, the California Republican Party circulated an internal memo warning against a divisive movement attempting to infiltrate the party from within, characterizing it as white nationalist and promoting reorganization of America "around an ethnically and culturally identity-based order, modeled closely after Nazi Germany."
The memo singled out the highly controversial Fuentes as the self-proclaimed leader and noted his followers — primarily young men — have already infiltrated some party positions.