In December 2017,
The New Yorker published an article by
Jane Mayer showcasing interviews with former minority members of the organization. Former staff members said they witnessed widespread discrimination against minorities in the group, and stated "the organization was a difficult workplace and rife with tension, some of it racial."
[6][56]One former employee, an African-American woman, said she was the only person of color working for the organization at the time she was hired in 2014; she then said that she was fired on
Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The article also revealed text messages sent by Crystal Clanton – who was a leading figure in the organization and served as the group's national field director for five years – to another Turning Point employee saying "i hate black people. Like fukk them all . . . I hate blacks. End of story." Kirk responded to the revelations by saying that "Turning Point assessed the situation and took decisive action within 72 hours of being made aware of the issue."
[6] The article also noted that Kirk had explicitly praised Clanton in his book
Time for a Turning Point, saying that she had been "the best hire we ever could have made," and that "Turning Point needs more Crystals; so does America."
[6]
In an article titled "Turning Point USA Keeps Accidentally Hiring Racists,"
HuffPost reported that the woman hired to replace Crystal Clanton had a history of using racial slurs, particularly against African-Americans, on
Twitter before deleting her account. In response to the reports, Kirk referred to the individual in question as "a former employee" in his official statement (without clarifying when she had been fired), and Turning Point issued an internal memo announcing that all current and new staff would face social media background checks.
[57]
Charlie Kirk has said Turning Point USA has no relationship with
alt-right groups.
[58] In 2017, Turning Point chapters organized campus visits by former Breitbart editor
Milo Yiannopoulos to the
University of Colorado Boulder and
Miami University (Ohio).
[59][60][61]
In 2018, The
Southern Poverty Law Center's
Hate Watch also documented TPUSA's links to
white supremacists.
[62][63]
In June 2018, conservative radio talk show host
Joe Walsh resigned from the TPUSA board because Charlie Kirk was too closely tied to Donald Trump. Walsh said that "It’s so important to not be beholden to politicians, but to be beholden to the issues ... When Charlie went to work for Trump, that crossed that line. You can’t advance Trump and advance these issues.
[54]
In October 2018, the Miami New Times reported that TPUSA members at
Florida International University shared jokes "about watching underage cartoon
pornography and deporting
Latina women, and, in the most repugnant case, share racist '
Pepe the Frog' memes showing Syrian men raping a white Swedish woman at gunpoint."
[55]