College Republican National Committee (CRNC) The
College Republican National Committee (CRNC), has historically been the main national College Republicans organization. Founded in 1892, it remains the largest and most active College Republicans organization with around 20 chapters on campuses across the United States. The
CRNC National Chairwoman and the national leadership team, including an executive director, political director, finance director, comptroller, national field director, treasurer, national secretary, and 4 regional vice-chairs, are elected at the bi-annual College Republican Convention. The current
CRNC National Chairwoman is Courtney Britt. In recent years, the CRNC has lost many of its state affiliates and chapters.
College Republicans United (CRU) The College Republicans United (CRU) was established in 2018 to oppose what was seen as a CRNC that was hostile to President
Donald Trump. It consists of various college chapters in Arizona and Iowa. The leadership structure and bylaws of the organization are not made public. The CRU have been criticized for chapters which allegedly posted "anti-Semitic" and "racist" postings online, causing rifts between the CRU and other CR organizations and donors, and has been described as "
far-right". The CRU drew further outrage after inviting
Nick Fuentes, a noted "white nationalist," to their National Convention event. The group previously invited another white nationalist,
Jared Taylor, to speak at a campus event. On January 31, 2025, CRU set up a table at Arizona State University's Tempe campus, "to urge students to report their peers for deportation to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement." The CRU is currently the smallest federation by state and chapter count, containing 5 collegiate chapters.
National Federation of College Republicans (NFCR) The National Federation of College Republicans was created in 2022 in response to controversies arising in the
CRNC. The NFCR encompasses 26 state federations (including but not limited to Florida, Texas, New York, North Carolina, and Louisiana). The NFCR Leadership positions consist of a chairperson, a National Vice Chairperson, an executive director, a treasurer, a secretary, and a Parliamentarian. Rachel Howard is the current National Chairwoman of the NFCR.
College Republicans of America (CRA) The College Republicans of America (CRA) was established in 2023 and encompasses seventeen federations (Arizona,
California, Kansas, Idaho, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, Missouri, Utah, Washington D.C., and Wisconsin); a plurality of clubs in Kentucky, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Rhode Island, and West Virginia; and a few clubs in several additional states. The CRA has over 200 active, affiliated College Republicans chapters. Some notable chapters are the
Penn State College Republicans, for the Pennsylvania Collegiate Leadership Conference and sizable deployments, and the Harvard Republican Club, for history and influence. They were joined in 2026 by the previously independent University of Florida College Republicans, one of the largest and most influential College Republican organizations. According to the CRA website, its members broke away from the CRNC due to it falling "into disrepair." The CRA President and the national committee consist of an appointed president, appointed vice-presidents, appointed directors, and annually elected regional representatives. The CRA also has a Board of Governors which consist of one National Committeeman per state, elected or appointed by that state (so long as they are "in good standing") via however the state sees fit. The CRA endorsed
Donald Trump for president during the
2024 United States presidential election and campaigned for him during the
2024 Iowa Republican presidential caucuses. Then-CRA President, Gabriel Guidarini, delivered the pledge of allegiance at the
2024 Republican National Convention. The group has ties to
Turning Point Action (TPA), with the COO of TPA serving on the CRA's advisory board. == Governance of state organizations ==