| John, They call me a "grifter."
That’s their go-to insult when someone refuses to kneel at the altar of the Minnesota GOP establishment. When someone speaks plainly. When someone reaches people they can’t even look them in the eye.
David Penn hit the nail on the head — they don't fear me personally. They fear what I represent: young people waking up. Black men refusing to be bought. Patriots who can’t be controlled. A real populist movement rising from the ashes of their failed games.
I didn’t join this fight to make friends with career politicians or sip cocktails at donor galas. I joined because the truth needs a voice. Because mentoring young men matters. Because coaching matters. And because leading by example is the only way this country survives.
To the "young Republicans" parroting talking points — I don’t blame you. You’ve been raised in a machine that feeds on cowardice. But you’ve also got a choice: step up, learn from men who’ve walked the fire, or stay irrelevant in the war we’re in.
We don’t have time for fake unity. We need real alignment. On principle. On purpose. If you're with me — if you're done with the lies — chip in and let’s finish what we started.
I’m not here to kiss the ring. I’m here to put the people back at the center of this fight — not the donors, not the consultants, not the country club gatekeepers. If you’ve seen through the games — if you know we need a real shift in direction — then stand with me now.
In truth and fire, Royce White
 Meet Royce White: Born and raised in the Twin Cities, Royce White was the son of a single mother and started playing sports at the age of 5 years old. Living in various neighborhoods growing up, much of his family remained in the Rondo community, where he spent much of his time and received schooling. White excelled at basketball and recieved a scholarship to play basketball at the University of Minnesota, and later transferred to Iowa State. He would go on to make Dean's List while receiving All Big-12 first-team honors and many other basketball awards. After being selected 16th overall by The Houston Rockets in the NBA draft, White began to voice concerns about the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement (CBA), specifically regarding mental health policy, which at the time did not exist. Eventually, his concerns became a public dispute between White and the NBA. This resulted in White demanding that the NBA, as a representative of the global corporate community, take up the responsibility of spearheading the mental health conversation – not just posturing through press statements, but through policy. Royce then went on to win two championships in Canada before moving over to play Big 3 Basketball. White appeared at a game in a t-shirt that read “Free The Uyghurs.” After a game-winning basket, White did a post-game interview on CBS, where he called for 2 Million Uyghurs to be freed and released from concentration camps. As the season went on, White would touch on taboo topics such as Gain of Function Research, The Federal Reserve, Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, Larry Hoover, Jeff Fort, Muammar Gaddafi, The Great Reset, Ivermectin, Me Too, etc. Now, Royce White is running for Senate in Minnesota to take down the Radical Left. Republicans have not seen recent success in Minnesota, but Royce's campaign is different: a grassroots movement that's sick of the Radical Agenda pushed by Far Left Democrats Tina Smith and Ilhan Omar. Royce needs your help to pull off a fourth quarter comeback victory and FLIP Minnesota Red for Republicans.
PASS ROYCE AN ASSIST
| PAID FOR BY ROYCE WHITE FOR SENATE P.O. Box 5473 Hopkins, MN 55343 | Copyright © 2025 Royce White For Senate, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you are interested in updates from Royce White, Senate Candidate in Minnesota.
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