Far-right extremists trading in outright "bigotry" are infiltrating and raising their profiles in the Republican Party ranks, and GOP leaders are sounding the alarm — but Donald Trump is giving them a pass.
According to The Washington Post, 23-year-old Alec Beaton epitomizes the problem. He has solid GOP credentials: former precinct delegate, county Republican youth chair, and Trump 2024 campaign field operative in Michigan. He's also a self-described Holocaust "revisionist" who treats Hitler praise as entertainment.
"We don't think Hitler is, like, the worst person ever," Beaton said while circulating through a national young conservatives conference, accompanied by an acquaintance working for the host organization, Turning Point USA.
"We influence the room," Beaton boasted, identifying as a groyper. "We have the power and influence to come in here, and they respect it."
Party insiders dismiss figures like Beaton as marginal players unrepresentative of mainstream Republicanism. But anxiety is spreading through GOP ranks. Leaked offensive group chats and escalating disputes over acceptable political boundaries are exposing a deeper problem: the party's young far-right contingent is gaining traction.
The real concern centers on white-supremacist influencer Nick Fuentes, who targets disaffected young men and has expressed his worldview bluntly: "Jews are running society, women need to shut the f--- up, Blacks need to be imprisoned for the most part, and we would live in paradise." This month, the College Republicans of America appointed a longtime Fuentes devotee as their political director.
The GOP is fracturing over how aggressively to confront this radicalization. Some Republicans dismiss Fuentes and his ilk as irrelevant online noise — infiltrators sabotaging the party. Others warn the movement has real momentum and demands forceful expulsion from the GOP.
The underlying threat concerns Republicans: the online ecosystem financially rewards extremism through clicks, likes, and followers.
"The migration of our politics online has created a perverse incentive structure," said David Brog, founding president of the foundation behind the annual National Conservatism Conference. "If you voice anti-Israel and antisemitic views, you get an instant reward in the form of clicks, likes and follows. This fuels the fallacy that the activist base of the party shares these views."
"So ambitious politicians and commentators trying to position themselves to lead 'America First' are misreading these digital leaves," Brog continued, "and coming to some deeply flawed conclusions."
The California Republican Party last month distributed a memo to state GOP leaders warning that groypers were securing party positions and running for office, demanding organized resistance.
"A radical and divisive iteration of 'America First' ideology is growing within the ranks of the Right wing in American politics that is directly at odds with the core founding principles of the United States Constitution," the memo stated. "The effects of this movement on our conservative American youth cannot be ignored."
California GOP Vice Chair John Park acknowledged the urgency. "This is one of those situations where silence is consent," he said, though he cautioned against overstating the problem's scale.
Trump, however, is taking the opposite approach. Asked about former Fox News host Tucker Carlson's decision to interview Fuentes, Trump offered a non-answer that functioned as tacit approval.
"I don't know much about him," Trump said of Fuentes — a claim contradicted by their 2022 dinner meeting, an incident that sparked widespread outrage.