March 5, 2026

admin

FIU Investigating Students’ Racist, Antisemitic Group Chat


Florida International University (FIU) is investigating a series of racist and antisemitic messages allegedly sent in a group chat that included the president of the school’s Turning Point USA (TPUSA) chapter.

On Wednesday, the Floridian reported on text messages allegedly exchanged in a group chat between Ian Valdes, president of FIU’s chapter of the conservative group TPUSA, Dariel Gonzalez, a former board member of FIU’s College Republicans, and others. In the messages, participants appear to take turns using racist and antisemitic slurs, including the N-word, more than 200 times.

“Total Negro Death!” Gonzalez allegedly wrote in one message. In a different text, while discussing a Black student who reportedly left FIU’s College Republicans after being subjected to racial slurs, Gonzalez wrote that another member of the group “called her a n*gger so she left.”

According to the Miami Herald, which also obtained and reported on the group chat logs, Gonzalez allegedly discussed “colored professors” in the chat. “I reguse [sic] to be indoctrinated by the coloreds,” he wrote, adding that he used the term “colored” because “I was told we can’t say black anymore.”

In a separate conversation about Jewish people, in which participants used the antisemitic slur Kike (which they spelled “kyke”), Valdes allegedly wrote, “I would def not marry a Jew lmao.”

The Herald’s reporting also revealed Valdes writing, “We need to have a moratorium on immigration temporarily unless it’s someone from a first world country.” He then clarified, “Yeah I obviously mean whites.”

Miami GOP secretary Abel Alexander Carvajal allegedly created and named the group chat, titled “Uber Retards Yapping Inc.”

Carvajal’s Instagram bio describes the 23-year-old as “just your friendly neighborhood law student and hockey fan.”

Carvajal, who in late January was appointed to a two-year role on the City of Hialeah’s Planning and Zoning Board, confirmed to the Floridian that the group chat in question was his, but denied any knowledge of the incendiary comments.

Republican State Rep. Juan Porras, who also serves as a Miami-Dade GOP state committeeman, issued a statement calling the messages “deeply disturbing” and urged Carvajal to resign from his role with the Miami-Dade GOP.

“Hatred toward Jewish Americans, racist rhetoric, calls for violence, all these ideas have no place in our party, our state, or our country,” Porras said in a statement.

Florida Republican state Senators Alexis Calatayud, Ileana Garcia, and Ana Maria Rodriguez also denounced the language in the group chat in a Facebook post and a joint statement calling for Carvajal’s resignation.

“Antisemitism and racism have no place in our society. We strongly condemn and find despicable the vile and unacceptable language that has been discovered in a group chat associated with the Miami Dade Republican Party’s Secretary,” Calatayud wrote in the Facebook post.

“The statements made by those individuals clarify their moral and intellectual corruption and demonstrate a complete misalignment with core, shared American values. The individuals in the group chat have exposed how profoundly misaligned their beliefs are to the views of the Republican Party of Florida.

“We call for their speedy and immediate expulsion of party leadership. BYE.”

A letter from three Florida Republican state senators calling on someone to resign after racist messages in a group chat
In a Facebook post and joint statement, Florida Republican state Sens. Alexis Calatayud, Ileana Garcia, and Ana Maria Rodriguez denounced the language in the group chat and called for Carvajal’s resignation.

Neither Carvajal, Valdes, nor Gonzalez responded to New Times‘ multiple requests for comment via Instagram and their respective groups.

FIU spokesperson Madeline Baró tells New Times that the university is investigating the matter involving its students.

“The university takes very seriously any allegation of discriminatory or threatening conduct,” Baró wrote in an email. “The alleged conduct is under review and will be addressed in accordance with the university’s policies and applicable law.”

When asked about whether the students are facing disciplinary action, Baró said that student privacy laws “prevent us from sharing specifics.” 

Gabriela Burstein, the president of FIU’s College Republicans, tells New Times that Gonzalez “is no longer a member of the College Republicans e-board, and has not been since last semester.”

“As of now, we are not ready to release a statement on this matter, but I can assure you this – we as an organization do not tolerate or condone this behavior,” Burstein wrote in an email.

The alleged messages come as Florida Republican gubernatorial candidate James Fishback has attempted to inject extremism and white nationalist rhetoric into GOP politics in the Sunshine State.

During his campaign, Fishback has earned the nickname “Groyper candidate” while courting Gen-Z men and aligning himself with the likes of white nationalist streamer Nick Fuentes. He has faced regular criticism for his racist remarks about his opponent, Byron Donalds, whom he has called a “slave to donors” and a “token Black” in Congress who wants to turn Florida into a “Section 8 ghetto.”

Valdes’ Instagram bio includes a link to a recent Fishback campaign event in Miami. The young man previously described himself on Instagram as a “campaign employee” for Fishback’s Miami team, but has since removed that title, according to the Herald.

screenshot of an instagram bio for Ian Valdes, the president of Florida International University's Turning Point USA chapter
Ian Valdes is the president of FIU’s chapter of the conservative group Turning Point USA.

This is not the first time that FIU students have been reported to have made racist comments in group chats.

In 2017, New Times obtained screenshots of chats among FIU’s campus Republicans, showing the students joking about the deadly Charlottesville neo-Nazi attack and threatening to “call ICE” on undocumented students who were asking Congress to pass the DREAM Act. In 2018, New Times published internal chats showing members of FIU’s Turning Point USA chapter joking about topics like white nationalism and Syrian refugees raping white women.

Following the latter incident, dozens of FIU professors demanded that the school promptly kick TPUSA off the public university’s campus. FIU later said it wouldn’t be investigating the messages, citing free speech.

Right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed in September 2025 during a speaking tour stop at Utah Valley University, founded TPUSA, a driving force behind young U.S. conservatives, particularly on college campuses, in 2012. He served as the organization’s executive director until his death, raising nearly $400 million in funding during his tenure.

This is a breaking story and will be updated as events warrant.





Source link

Leave a Comment