While investigators have yet to uncover and confirm the motives behind the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, at least one group, known as Groypers, has been thrust into the limelight in the aftermath of his death. The alt-right network consistently criticized Kirk's Turning Point USA but has denied involvement in the murder. Despite this, the suspect’s alleged ties to the Groypers have led to a closer eye on them.
Who are the Groypers? They are a “far-right, online-based movement organized around white nationalist and ‘America First’” causes, said Newsweek. The term ‘Groyper’ is the name of the group’s mascot, a cartoon frog that’s a “variant of the ‘Pepe’ meme used widely among extremist groups.”
The Groyper movement “presents its ideology as more nuanced than other groups in the white supremacist sphere,” said the Anti-Defamation League. Groypers “believe they are working to defend against demographic and cultural changes.” But Groypers believe other groups do not go far enough and “regularly confront mainstream conservative organizations,” including Kirk's Turning Point USA, for “not being adequately ‘pro-white.’”
Groypers are led in part by Nick Fuentes, an alt-right podcaster whose “anti-Israel, anti-immigrant, anti-transgender and anti-civil-rights views seem to have gained new currency during the second Trump administration,” said The New York Times. Fuentes made headlines in 2022 when he dined with then-former President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago club.
How influential are they? Some have “pointed to indications" that Kirk’s alleged shooter “might have considered himself a Groyper,” said The Independent. Certain messages from the suspect were reportedly linked to the Groyper movement. But Fuentes has condemned Kirk’s shooting and denied that anyone from the group was involved.
One woman linked to Groypers was sentenced to prison in 2023 for being “part of a group that stormed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office” during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, said The Associated Press. Fuentes was also present at the Capitol while the attack took place, though he did not enter the building.
Groypers “represent a new momentum within American white nationalism,” said the U.K. think tank Institute for Strategic Dialogue. By spreading their presence online, particularly among Gen Z, Groypers “hope to attract disaffected conservatives by exploiting schisms and grievances within mainstream conservatism.” |