'' The leaked messages drew widespread condemnation. Several participants lost their political positions within days. Some apologized for the messages and their context, while others declined to comment or claimed alteration, lack of context, or manipulation.
The Nation noted that "the
extreme right is such a large faction in the party, especially among the young, that disavowal is politically costly. Both Trump and Vance are shrewd enough to know that Young Republicans who post 'I love Hitler' on chats are the future of the GOP".
Republicans A White House spokesperson dismissed links between the messages and President
Donald Trump's rhetoric or actions, stating that "only an activist, left-wing reporter would desperately try to tie President Trump into a story about a random groupchat he has no affiliation with." The spokesperson added that "no one has been subjected to more vicious rhetoric and violence than President Trump and his supporters." Vance called Jones's comments "far worse" without addressing the Young Republicans' rhetoric.
MSNBC noted Vance's "first instinct was to downplay the scandal and go after a Democrat".
CNN described Vance's response as the "epitome of the
MAGA movement's evolution on hateful rhetoric", noting "The
moral high ground is out;
whataboutism is very much in", and that
Roger Stone denounced the comments.
The Atlantic called Vance's deflection an ambitious "calculated response" to consolidate the MAGA base and succeed Donald Trump in 2028, stating "in the racist provocations of conservative cadres, Vance clearly sees the future of the party he intends to lead". Representative
Elise Stefanik initially condemned some of the Young Republicans who she had promoted and financially supported in the past. However, she quickly pivoted within minutes of JD Vance's deflections and his refusal to seriously address the racist group chat messages. Stefanik shifted to calling the
Politico story a "hit piece" and said that Democrats who had raised the alarm were "hyperventilating". House Speaker
Mike Johnson stated on October 16, 2025, after the leak and swastika images from David Taylor's office surfaced, that "we roundly condemn any of that nonsense". Asked if he had concerns about pro-Nazi sympathies among young Republicans, Johnson replied, "No". Representative
Mike Collins chose to shift the focus away from the leaked messages, writing on social media "I don't care about some group chat", followed by a photo of
Laken Riley, a Georgia nursing student who was murdered by an undocumented immigrant in 2024.
Andrew Torba, CEO of
alt-right social network
Gab, defended the rhetoric as "tame", writing "[t]hey have no idea what's coming". California governor
Gavin Newsom called for a congressional
antisemitism investigation of the Young Republicans. New York Governor
Kathy Hochul highlighted in election materials her opponent Representative
Elise Stefanik's ties to some members. Hochul called out participants and urged consequences to stop the rhetoric. The
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and House Majority PAC used chat content in battleground state campaigns. Representative
Yvette Clarke, chair of the
Congressional Black Caucus, quoted racial slurs against Black people from the chat, stating concern that "when we say white supremacy is thriving on the right, they call us reactionary" and that "the Republican Party embraces bigotry". Representative
Grace Meng, chair of the
Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, said that "members' willingness to use such rhetoric behind closed doors showed their character and the tone set by national leadership". == Similar incidents ==