The recent uptick in antisemitic and racist language being disseminated by younger GOP activists nationwide has largely been fueled by a younger generation that follows extremist online influencers like Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes, and Republican gubernatorial candidate James Fishback.
It appears this has now spread to the Miami-Dade Republican Party.
In a disturbing series of group chat obtained by The Floridian, Miami GOP Secretary Abel Alexander Carvajal ran a group chat in which the N-word was used over 200 times and members celebrated the removal of an African-American activist from the FIU College Republicans.
Carvajal’s chat, titled “Uber Retards Yapping Inc.,” gives a shocking glimpse into the GOP’s younger element of college students who espouse hateful ideas. Even more concerning are the chat’s members: Carvajal, who is Secretary of the Miami-Dade GOP; Dariel Gonzalez, who is the FIU College Republicans Membership Director; and Ian Valdes, the FIU Turning Point chapter president.
For months, Carvajal created and served as the administrator of the chat. Many times he participated in the conversations. At no point did Carvajal close the chat or attempt to calm the narrative. He labeled his own control of the chat as “MaoTze Abel,” a joking reference to dictator Mao Zedong.
The chat goes beyond racist language. Sources have confirmed that Carvajal has recruited members of this racist and antisemitic element into the Miami-Dade GOP to serve as committeemen and committeewomen.
“Total Negro Death!” shouts Dariel Gonzalez, who has recently applied to become a GOP committeeman.

The behavior wasn’t limited only to online chats. The messages confirm that racist behavior and actions were directed toward at least one African-American student to force her to leave the College Republicans.
One portion of the chat references an African-American student named “Sandra,” whose real name has been changed to protect her identity. Sandra left the FIU College Republicans after being subjected to racial slurs.
“What happened to her?” asks one participant.
“William called her a n*gger so she left,” responds Dariel Gonzalez.

Rather than condemn the attack, Carvajal mocked her departure and used slurs.
“Why didn’t miggress leave?” asks Abel Alexander Carvajal.
On several occasions within the chat, Carvajal uses the terms “Miggress,” “Migglet,” and “Migger,” which are variations of “Niggress,” a slur using the female derivative of the N-word; “Ngglet,” a slur referring to African-American children; and “N*gger,” a word so racist it needs no definition.


The New, Younger Republican Party?
Participants routinely joked about extreme acts of violence toward Black people. The rhetoric shows a sick and twisted fantasy of physical harm and the extermination of African Americans:
Carvajal not only remained in the chat, he engaged with it, posted his own derogatory comments, and at times fueled the rhetoric of the chat.
In early October, Ian Valdes — the president of the FIU Turning Point chapter — renamed the chat “Gooning in Agartha.”
Agartha is a mythical civilization that Nazi General Heinrich Himmler and other Nazis believed was the hidden homeland of an Aryan race. The concept’s virality has recently been embraced by neo-Nazis and white nationalists.
Antisemitism and the ‘Little Kyke’
The name appears to have remained active for several days, even while Carvajal, Valdes, and Gonzalez continued to use the chat.
The chat dipped further in the political gutter, as both Dariel and Valdes expressed antisemitic sentiments when referencing marrying a Jewish woman. Valdes stated that he was “going full goy,” while Dariel said that if one had sex with a Jewish woman, one would run the risk of having “a little kyke running arounddddd.”
Dariel Gonzalez called Agartha “Heaven inside the earth.”
Another participant responds, “Reverse Zionism?”
Dariel responds, “Pretty much.”
The texts confirm references to the Nazi ideology of a place without Jews.
It wasn’t until days later that an unrelated chat participant removed the name. But the chat — and the antisemitism — continued.
On the topic of dating or marrying a Jew:
“I would def not marry a Jew lmao,” says FIU Turning Point President Ian Valdes.
“Chances are you could have a little kyke running around… keep your cock away from them,” responds Dariel Gonzalez.

The Floridian has also learned that the matter has been referred to FIU Campus Police for investigation due to the harassing language.
The messages also reveal a coordinated effort to destabilize the leadership of the Republican Party of Miami-Dade County from within.
In the exchange, a participant identified as Dariel urges action against the party’s current chairman, writing, “Your new purpose is to fire [Miami GOP Chairman],” followed moments later by, “And replace him.”
Rather than rejecting the suggestion, Miami GOP Secretary Abel Alexander Carvajal appears to encourage the effort, responding, “We might get there soon,” and later adding, “Soon buddy soon!!” The conversation suggests that Carvajal was not merely participating in the chat but engaging with individuals who were openly discussing a plan to remove the sitting chairman and install new leadership—raising serious concerns that party officials were using fringe activists and hostile rhetoric as part of a broader effort to undermine and destabilize the party’s leadership.
The use of racial slurs is not merely offensive — it is dehumanizing, harmful, and rooted in a long history of discrimination and hatred.
According to another source within the local Republican Party, “the role of party secretary is not symbolic; it carries a responsibility to represent all members of the organization with professionalism and respect,” the source said, adding that, “Abel Alexander Carvajal is in an elected leadership position and represents the largest Republican county party in Florida. That includes more than 170,000 African-American voters.”
Rather than distancing himself from the rhetoric or attempting to moderate the conversation, he engaged alongside other participants, contributing to a pattern of mockery and hostility toward Jewish and African-American individuals that stands in direct conflict with those obligations.
Party leaders and grassroots members could now face serious questions: how could an officer entrusted with representing a diverse county organization openly participate in such hateful exchanges and will it affect the 2026 elections?
Kevin Cooper, Chairman of the Miami-Dade Republican Party, could not be reached for comment.
Carvajal responded to our request for comment, confirmed that it was his chat, and denied that he had any knowledge of the incendiary comments made on his chat.
Carvajal has now taken the chat down.
“I had I known and had I seen some of these messages I would have called the police,” said Carvajal. When asked if he would resign is position with the local Republican group, Carvajal stated,” No. Of course not. Of course not, for you know, for a chat where the messages that were stated were not mine.”