There’s now a ‘Club America’ at Great Valley High School. Turning Point USA says interest grew after Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
Eastern Pennsylvania chapters of Club America have grown from 11 to almost 40 since Kirk's death, according to Turning Point USA. But that expansion might be overstated in the Philadelphia region.
Making his pitch to the Great Valley school board, Jed Lu said he and fellow students seeking to bring slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA organization into their high school weren’t racists or extremists.
“We simply have a different perspective,” Lu told the board at a late February meeting.
The Chester County district is one of the latest in the Philadelphia area to approve a Club America chapter — the high school offshoot of Kirk’s group. The organization seeks to mobilize “anti-woke warriors” and has rapidly been adding new local chapters since his assassination in September, provoking debate around right-wing influence in public schools.
Nationally, chapters have nearly tripled — from 1,200 prior to Kirk’s death, to more than 3,300, according to Turning Point officials. Governors in Republican-led states like Arkansas and Nebraska are partnering with Turning Point to expand clubs throughout their states.
In eastern Pennsylvania, there were 11 Club America chapters at the end of last school year. Now, “we’re currently approaching 40,” said Nick Cocca, Turning Point’s enterprise director.
» READ MORE: How Charlie Kirk’s death could shift Pa.’s young voters
The group’s expansion might be overstated in the Philadelphia region. Seven area high schools listed by Turning Point on its website or Instagram graphics as having Club America chapters said they didn’t have clubs.
Souderton Area High School, for instance, appears on Turning Point’s map, but doesn’t have a club. The school’s assistant principal, Matthew Haines, said “a student made an inquiry” in September about starting a chapter, but never applied to do so.
In some schools, like Springfield High School in Delaware County, “we have a few students who started running an after-school student pilot a few months back,” said principal Monica Conlin, but the district doesn’t officially recognize the club. Conlin said new clubs must complete a three-year pilot before gaining district approval.
Still, the organization has gained traction. In addition to Great Valley, Penncrest High School in Rose Tree Media School District lists Club America among its student clubs; district officials and staff didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Turning Point says it also has a Club America chapter at Pennsbury High School, and an Instagram account for “Club America at Pennsbury” invited students to a Feb. 25 meeting to discuss the State of the Union and “participate in prayer for law enforcement and our nation.” District officials didn’t respond to requests for comment.
‘An outpouring of support’ after Kirk’s death
A spokesperson for Turning Point couldn’t explain the discrepancy between its list and schools that say they don’t have any Club America chapters.
The organization was also unable to provide a local student willing to be interviewed.
Cocca said Turning Point “saw an outpouring of support and outreach from young people across the country” in the wake of Kirk’s Sept. 10 assassination. To support its growth, the organization is hiring more field representatives to work with high school students, Cocca said.
Turning Point, which began as an organization advocating for conservative views on college campuses, had previously been expanding its presence in high schools. (A Turning Point chapter launched years ago at Pennridge High School in Upper Bucks County, for example.)
Turning Point last July renamed its high school operation Club America. “We wanted a brand that spoke specifically to them,” Cocca said. He said that “when Charlie was alive, he used to say ‘I want a Club America chapter in every high school in America.’”
The expansion has spurred conflict. Critics have highlighted Kirk’s controversial statements, including referring to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as “an awful person” and calling the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act a “mistake.”
Kirk also promoted the so-called “great replacement theory,” framing non-white immigration as a plot to replace white populations.
“This club is an easy way to incorporate hate and discrimination within our high school. This should not be normalized,” a Change.org petition launched in January against a proposed Club America chapter at West Chester East High School read. An update to the petition later declared that Turning Point “was shut down at West Chester East.”
Molly Schwemler, a district spokesperson, said that earlier this year, some students expressed interest in starting a Club America chapter.
But “after discussing the process and need for sponsorship from a teacher with school administration,” students “instead decided to organize independently outside of the school,” Schwemler said. (On its website, Turning Point lists West Chester East as having a chapter.)
In an Instagram post, the club said it decided to operate independently “because people can’t be mature, open minded or respectful at our school.”
Activism hubs and kits
In addition to identifying a teacher adviser, students looking to form clubs often have to supply information to administrators like their purpose, planned activities, and funding needs.
Schools have little discretion to reject a new club, based on the federal Equal Access Act and First Amendment, said Jeffrey Sultanik, a solicitor for numerous Philadelphia-area districts.
Districts need “to be viewpoint-neutral,” Sultanik said, noting that “once you open up the door to clubs coming in,” administrators can’t pick and choose which to permit.
In its handbook for Club America chapters, Turning Point calls it “imperative that every chapter works to become officially recognized by the school,” offering students help if schools deny them.
Students can form an “activism hub” outside of school for a specific geographic area “as a last resort,” the handbook says.
In Downingtown — where Turning Point says there is an activism hub — a school district spokesperson said the district has not sponsored any clubs “related to religious or political groups in recent history.” (Some other area schools have official political clubs: Penncrest High School, for instance, lists Penncrest Democrats of America.)
Turning Point says its Club America chapters are nonpartisan and don’t support specific candidates.
But the group’s ideology is clear from materials it supplies to student members. Presentations available in Turning Point’s “Activism Library” for students to use have titles including “Taxes Are Shady,” “Socialism Kinda Sus,” and “Big Gov Scares.”
“Why are those on the left not proud to be Americans?” a presentation titled “Always Love America” asks.
Kids can order “Activism Kits” from Turning Point with posters and stickers. A “2A” kit features slogans like “Gun rights are women’s rights” and “Guns are the greatest equalizer.”
Cocca said Turning Point provides students “anything they may need, to promote what they want to promote, and what they want to make their club about” — whether that’s registering students to vote, or learning about the Constitution, he said.
“Ultimately, it’s up to the students to use those resources the way they want to use them,” he said.
Opposition to Club America groups
Critics accuse Turning Point of trying to indoctrinate high schoolers.
“They are grooming at the high school level, and college level, for a generational change,” said Sherry Lawrence, a parent in Great Valley who opposed the district’s new Club America chapter. “All the red flags are there for people who don’t subscribe to this brand of conservatism, or this brand of Christianity.”
Lawrence questioned whether adults were driving some efforts to organize Club America chapters.
In an October Facebook post in a Turning Point Pennsylvania Action group, George Sabo, then a GOP candidate for township supervisor in East Whiteland, said his daughter was starting a chapter at Great Valley High School. “We had discussed it over the summer but pulled the trigger after Charlie’s assassination,” Sabo wrote.
In a brief phone interview, Sabo said it was his daughter’s idea to start the chapter.
“My daughter and family, who believe in the Bible, and believe God is king, value those properties and want to see that brought more into the school district,” Sabo said.
He said that while there had been pushback from other kids, “there’s some support from other kids, too.”
The Great Valley board approved the club 7-0 at its February meeting.
At the board meeting, Lu, the club president, said he and the three other club officers had initiated its formation.
While the club has a “conservative viewpoint,” Lu said, “our purpose is civic debate and civil discussion.” He added that the club is motivated by “the Christian value of love and compassion.”
The club hopes to be an “impactful addition to Great Valley High School,” Lu said.