A group of college Republicans was harassed by a self-described communist supporter who at one point threw her drink on one of the men at the table they were manning. The student was later arrested and charged with battery and identified as Shelby Shoup, a campaign worker for Andrew Gillum, who is running for governor of Florida.
Video footage captured the exchange on Oct. 30, in which the girl claimed that the Florida State University College Republicans were supporting Nazis.
“You are supporting Nazis, do you understand that?” she said.
Asked whether a hammer and sickle button she wore attached to her shirt meant was supporting communism, she replied, “Yeah, I [expletive] am.”
Shoup didn’t respond when one of the Republicans noted that communism is responsible for more deaths than any other ideology, but she did throw her drink, which she said was chocolate milk, on one of the college Republicans.
“You are normalizing and enabling Nazis,” she claimed.
Courtland Culver, who was part of the group of Republicans being yelled at, said on Facebook: “I am so sick and tired of being told that intolerance is concentrated of the right. Yes, of course, there are Republicans that are horrible people, just like there are horrible Democrats.”
Her job description includes several activities: “Conduct extensive donor research for Tallahassee, Florida, and national supporters; Advertise and staff official Andrew Gillum For Governor fundraisers, receptions, and public events; [and] Manage formal and informal Twitter Q&A sessions.”
No Links
The Republicans were asking people to get out and vote for Republicans in the midterm elections, including former Rep. Ron DeSantis, a Navy veteran who is running for governor, and Governor Rick Scott, who is challenging incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.). President Donald Trump rallied for DeSantis and Scott on Oct. 31.There are no links between the Florida Republicans and white nationalists, and the girl did not provide evidence for her claims, which sought to link Republicans to the recent shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh.
“We must all rise above the hate, move past our divisions, and embrace our common destiny as Americans,” he said. “And it doesn’t mean that we can’t fight hard and be strong, and say what’s on our mind. But we have to always remember those elements; we have to remember the elements of love and dignity and respect.”