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​Popular Pro-Trump ​Digital Strategist Made Racist Comments on a Secret Twitter Account

Caleb Hull holds a cell phone outside the White House in a photo Hull shared on Twitter on Feb. 4, 2019. (Photo via Twitter, @Calebjhull)

Caleb Hull, ​a digital communications strategist popular with pro-Trump Republicans, made racist ​and inflammatory​ comments, including the use of the n-word, on a Twitter account he used as a video game​r in 2014. The account was deleted ​shortly after Right Wing Watch began reaching out to sources​ to report this story, but large portions of the account have been preserved via digital archives.

Hull’s professional work history places him behind​ the​ scenes in influential spheres of the modern GOP, as detailed by a “former guest speaker” blurb(link is external) on The Leadership Institute’s website.​ ​Today, Hull is a a political communications consultant and is listed as the manager of a limited liability company called Statecraft Digital(link is external) (not to be confused with a political communications firm of the same name based in Florida). He got his start in conservative causes working for the GOP youth organization Turning Point USA as an Ohio field director and chapter president​ while attending college at Cedarville University in Ohio. In 2016, Hull joined TPUSA as video director, later becoming the organization’s creative director and the operations coordinator of Turning Point News. Hull went on to work for Independent Journal Review as social media manager and senior editor.

Before consulting, Hull worked as director of content at Targeted Victory, an influential Republican marketing and advertising firm. According to FEC filings(link is external), Targeted Victory’s clients include campaigns for high-ranking Republicans like Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Sen. Cory Gardner ​of Colorado, and powerful Republican entities like ​the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which paid Targeted Victory nearly $350,000 for “digital consulting” in April 2020 alone.

Hull’s online reach​ often overlaps with influential conservative figures, including the president’s sons. Donald Trump Jr(link is external). has shared content posted by Hull on Twitter at least 24 times(link is external) according to a RWW review. Eric Trump tagged Hull(link is external) in a tweet Tuesday. In just the last month, Hull’s content has been shared by ​Trump administration officials​, including Commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission Brendan Carr(link is external), Trump staffers, such as Director of Communications for Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign Tim Murtaugh(link is external), and members of Congress, like Rep. Greg Murphy(link is external) of North Carolina. Hull’s content is often circulated widely among conservative media writers, pundits​, and journalists; he has bragged publicly(link is external) about fetching more than ​4 billion views online for conservative video content. In 2018, Hull was retweeted(link is external) by President Donald Trump.

Washington Examiner awarded(link is external) Hull a spot on its Red Alert Politics “30 Under 30” list in 2018 alongside people who would go on to become major players in modern conservative politics, including activist Candace Owens, Fox News pundit Tomi Lahren, and PragerU video personality Will Witt. In the Washington area, he is well connected(link is external) in right-wing media circles and has uploaded photos of himself socializing with people who currently work at The Daily Caller, Townhall Media, and TPUSA.

In 2014, Hull made anti-Black, anti-Muslim, ​and anti-LGBTQ remarks ​on a Twitter account that ​RWW determined belonged to Hull by reviewing archives from the account and comparing them to still-active posts on accounts where Hull uses his real name. The account, with the handle @FlwTV(link is external), was deleted from Twitter shortly after RWW started reaching out to Hull’s industry colleagues.​

Hull’s since-removed Twitter account was associated with an account by a similar name(link is external) on Twitch, a streaming site ​popular among gamers; that account was also deleted between the time that we started contacting sources and when RWW contacted Hull via phone. Before the account was deleted from Twitch, it contained videos showing Hull on camera alongside the @FlwTV Twitter handle. Hull’s Twitch account had not uploaded a video since 2014, but ​it displayed a profile picture used(link is external) by Hull on his​ professional Twitter account, @CalebJHull(link is external), in 2019​. Hull's professional Twitter account was​ also displayed in the “About” tab of his Twitch profile.

(link is external) (Screenshot / Twitch)

Images posted to the @FlwTV account on Twitter in 2014 matched some of those shared by Hull on his Instagram account, and several(link is external) photos(link is external) of Hull were posted on the account that rendered results nowhere else online when reverse-searched on Yandex and Google Images. In replies to other users on Twitter, the @FlwTV account repeatedly referred(link is external) people to connect on Skype via the username “CalebJHull.”

Hull casually deployed(link is external) the n-word(link is external) on​ his​ @FlwTV Twitter account on several occasions and shared jokes in which the slur was the punchline(link is external). In one instance, he remarked(link is external) that he was banned from a streamer’s chat room after he “spammed” the n-word “17 times.” Hull promoted racist tropes about Black people, specifically those involving watermelon and fried chicken(link is external)Black children without fathers(link is external), and slaves picking cotton(link is external). Hull shared several(link is external) memes(link is external) containing these racist tropes, and he cited the same tropes while writing his own captions to images. For example, Hull captioned(link is external) one image depicting a Black man wearing clothing styled after a world map: “He’s wearing a map so he can find his dad.”

(link is external) Caleb Hull, using the account @FlwTV, repeatedly tweeted the n-word. (Screenshot / Twitter)

Hull shared an image(link is external) multiple times that depicts a piece of fried chicken hanging from a noose, and ​in one tweet, he juxtaposed the image on his timeline with an image of a Black man.

(link is external) Caleb Hull juxtaposed an image of a piece of fried chicken hanging from a noose with an image of a Black man. (Screenshot / Twitter)

In several instances, Hull levied anti-Black sentiment at Avalanche, a Black e-sports player and video game streamer. Hull asked(link is external) Avalache where he picks his cotton. In another, Hull tweeted(link is external) a racist meme with the caption “you’re black.” RWW attempted to reach Avalanche via Twitter direct message but did not receive a response.

Recently, Hull has stated that he supports ​"black lives matter,​" but in phrase only. “I do not support Black Lives Matter, the radical organization trying to push an absurd agenda in the midst of tragedy,” he tweeted(link is external) on June 7.

Other targets of Hull’s mockery included Muslims, special needs children, and Latinos. Hull shared(link is external) a meme styled after the hit mobile phone game “Angry Birds​”—​in which a player can shoot colorful cartoon birds out of a slingshot—but instead of​ cartoon birds​, the meme showed jet airplanes​ in a slingshot aimed at the Twin Towers with a caption that read​​, “New game came out today. Angry Muslims.” Hull also shared an image depicting a man wearing a thobe with an AK-47 rifle on his back, which Hull captioned(link is external), “When you’re about to hijack a plane then your mom says you need to finish your chores.” Hull shared a meme mocking children with Down syndrome(link is external) and captioned(link is external) a photo of a yearbook with several student​s who have the last name Lopez, “When the whole drug cartel goes to your school.”

Several tweets posted by Hull deploy the anti-gay slurs “fag(link is external)” and “faggot(link is external),” which he frequently misspelled “fagit(link is external).” ​In one tweet, Hull ​ask​ed(link is external) how to report people ​to​ Twitter for “being gay,​” and ​in another, he uploaded a photo(link is external) of himself holding a ​piece of paper with a message ​to another user​ that read, "get ebola," and contained the anti-gay slur​.

(link is external) Caleb Hull uploaded this photo containing an anti-gay slur to his now deleted @FlwTV Twitter account in 2014. (Screenshot / Twitter)

​When reached by phone Wednesday, a spokesperson for TPUSA told RWW, “Turning Point USA was not aware of these alleged incidents​,​”​ and did not provide further comment. RWW attempted to reach Independent Journal Review CEO Alex Skatell and Targeted Victory via email ​Wednesday but did not receive a response​ before publication.

Hull’s inflammatory comments did not cease ​in 2014. In June, Hull mocked reports that a noose was found(link is external) hanging in a stall used by Black NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace. Hull posted a photo of a cell phone charging cord dangling in front of the camera, writing, “Wow. Just came home and someone hung a noose in my house.” The tweet has since been deleted(link is external).

(link is external) Caleb Hull tweet and deleted an image of a coiled phone charger to mock reports that a Black NASCAR driver found rope resembling a noose in a stall he was using. (Screenshot / Twitter)

In response to reports(link is external) that activists had sought to establish a “Black House Autonomous Zone” north of the White House—an occupied protest space ​demonstrators sought to ​occupy with tents—Hull quibbled(link is external), “They had one for 8 years and almost nothing changed.” Hull also deleted that tweet(link is external).

In January 2019, Hull defended(link is external) a viral photo of students wearing blackface at a Covington Catholic High School basketball game, writing​, “This was a blackout game. It’s a normal thing at almost every school. What you all are doing to these kids is truly disgusting.” He repeatedly defended his position on the matter, attempting(link is external) to differentiate between blackface and “body paint for school pride where everyone is wearing all black.”

​When reached by phone Wednesday, Hull declined to provide comment for this story, and instead posted a statement(link is external) on Twitter. He did not deny his history of racist and homophobic remarks.

(Correction, 7/1/20: An earlier version of this article erroneously stated that Caleb Hull was a managing partner at a Florida-based political communications firm called Statecraft Digital, based on LinkedIn search results available at the time of RWW’s reporting. In fact, Hull owns a limited liability company(link is external) (LLC) by the same name registered in Virginia. RWW also misidentified Rep. Adam Hattersley as a Republican; Hattersley is a Democrat. Right Wing Watch regrets the errors.)