GOP: Vandalism fueled by toxic rhetoric
[March 31, 2026]
By Cat Barker | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – The chair of the Illinois Republican Party is
speaking out after a “disturbing act of vandalism” targeting a suburban
GOP office, calling it a “symptom of escalating political hostility.”
Kathy Salvi condemned the incident, which happend in January, at the
Wheeling Township Republican headquarters in Arlington Heights, where
two elderly suspects allegedly defaced the property with Nazi symbols,
profanity, and what police described as feces or an unknown substance.
“What happened in Arlington Heights is terrible,” Salvi told The Center
Square Monday. “Targeted political violence and vandalism… has no place
in our country.”
Authorities arrested and charged the suspects – both in their late 60s
and early 70s – last week in connection with the incident. Salvi praised
law enforcement for acting quickly and said she expects the individuals
will be held accountable.
Salvi pointed to what she described as increasingly extreme political
language as a driving force behind such acts.
“When you disagree with a policy… to call Trump Hitler, it invites these
acts of violence,” she said. “That kind of rhetoric makes us all less
safe.”
Kathy Salvi argued that inflammatory comparisons – such as equating
immigration enforcement agencies with the Gestapo – can “stoke”
individuals into committing destructive acts.

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Illinois Republican Chair Kathy Salvi speaks at a news conference,
Sept. 16, 2024. Photo: Jim Talamonti / The Center Square

While the suspects’ ages surprised some, Salvi dismissed the idea
that political violence is tied to any one demographic.
“I think it’s across the board,” she said, adding that heated
political discourse can influence people of any age.
She also reflected on her own experience as the Republican nominee
for U.S. Senate in 2022, saying she faced harassment, threats, and
public hostility during her campaign.
“I was spat at… cursed,” Salvi said. “It’s one thing to disagree.
It’s another to engage in slurs and violence.
Despite the incident, Salvi said Republicans will continue to
advocate for their positions and engage in public dialogue, urging a
return to what she described as respectful political engagement.
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