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A student at a Christian university in California has found her efforts to formalize a Turning Point USA chapter thwarted, citing the institution’s stance against “political advocacy initiatives.” This decision underscores a broader policy that limits the recognition of politically driven student groups.
Sadie Burnett, now in her junior year at Vanguard University in Costa Mesa, California, leads the unrecognized Turning Point USA chapter. Despite the lack of official status, Burnett has maintained an active presence on campus.
“Since 2023, our chapter has been vibrant and engaged,” Burnett shared with Fox News Digital. “We’ve organized numerous events and even participated in the club rush. Students were genuinely enthusiastic about our group, and our activities were a distinctive aspect of our Christian university experience. It was something that not only existed but thrived under the university’s eye.”
Nonetheless, Vanguard University recently established a policy to cease the acceptance of political clubs. Instead, they have instituted a new procedure requiring all political activism or events to be coordinated through the administration, effectively centralizing control over such engagements.

In a photograph provided to Fox News Digital, Sadie Burnett is seen holding a sign featuring Charlie Kirk, highlighting her involvement and commitment to the chapter’s cause.
“We received an email over the summer stating that the school was taking a new direction with student organizations,” Burnett said. “They’re going completely apolitical, giving this idea that Christians do not necessarily belong in politics, which is interesting because they do have a political science department, which I’m a part of.”
Burnett said that she has met with the school administration, trying to come to an arrangement that would allow Turning Point to operate. She said she’s been shut down repeatedly.
The group is able to gather on campus, but only outside, and not in any official capacity as a conservative group.
“We’re not ‘conservative,’ we’re just students hanging out,” Burnett explained, adding that some chapter members feel unsafe being out in the open given the “anti-conservative” sentiments on campus and online.
Registered student organizations can host events on campus, along with a litany of other privileges not granted to unaffiliated groups.

A crowd gathers for a vigil hosted by Turning Point USA at Vanguard University in September 2025 after Charlie Kirk’s assassination. (Micah Kunkle, Carson Van Vooren)
“The difference between being an unaffiliated chapter versus being a registered student organization is that chapters or organizations that are registered, they can book rooms for meetings well in advance to make sure that they have a space to speak, they have a space to host events,” Burnett said. “They’re allowed to receive university funding. They can rush at club rush and interact with students, interact with new-coming students that are coming in [and] prospective students.”
Burnett said that the chapter can’t host tabling events, where other students can approach and ask them questions, which she defines as “one of the heart and cores to Turning Point” as a whole. After all, she said, colleges used to be known as places where students were encouraged to freely debate ideas.
“If I wanted to go to a college or a university that was anti-conservative, but at least they let me speak, I would have absolutely chosen to go there,” she said. “So I feel like I got the rug pulled out from under me from the decision that I chose to come to this school.”
Most importantly, Burnett said, Christians should not be sidelined from political debate.
“Christians have a place in politics, and not only a place, we have a profound voice, the most profound voice in politics. We have every right to assert ourselves, to make claims, and it’s so disappointing to see a Christian university push this idea that Christians should not speak and that politics are taboo,” she said.

A vigil is hosted by Turning Point USA at Vanguard University in September 2025 after Charlie Kirk’s assassination. (Micah Kunkle, Carson Van Vooren)
Amanda Lebrecht, Vanguard University’s vice president for student development, said that in 2023, when the Turning Point chapter was in the process of applying to become a registered student group, the school was already moving away from political clubs.
“We were in the process then of disbanding our inter-club council and moving towards what we now have fully established, which is our student clubs and organization model,” she told Fox News Digital.
“This fall, it was established that university policy does not permit campus clubs affiliated with political advocacy initiatives,” she said, adding that the decision is part of an effort to advance “our educational mission within the context of our small Christian community.”
In lieu of political clubs, students at Vanguard are encouraged to work with the university administration on broader initiatives like last year’s “Year of Civility,” which Lebrecht described as “co-curricular programming.” She said the school hosted near-daily events from the beginning of the 2024-2025 academic year up until the November election, meant to meet the school’s mission of “lead[ing] a Christ-centered life of leadership and service.”
This year’s theme is “Courageous Conversations,” which, with the help of students, brought pro-life activist Lila Rose of Live Action to campus.

People raise placards reading “This is our Turning Point” during a memorial service for slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium, in Glendale, Arizona, Sept. 21, 2025. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)
“So, we’ve been meeting with these students frequently to help them reach their goals, but in a way that works with serving our community, and we’ve provided an opportunity that still exists for them to have an academic social club through the history [and] poli-sci department,” Lebrecht said.
To Burnett’s point about the safety of conservative students on campus, Lebrecht said the students have direct access to the school’s head of campus safety, and that, uniquely, the school shares its campus with the Costa Mesa Police Department, along with the city’s fire department.
“We will continue to engage these students, and we will continue to try to find a way to help them meet their goals and have it work within the Vanguard community,” Lebrecht said.
Lebrecht said that the president of the university prefers not to have various political clubs on campus, politically left or right leaning, but instead “seeks to channel their voice … in a different way, not silence them.”
Vanguard does allow what it calls “cultural and heritage clubs,” including a Black Student Union, which Lebrecht said “exist to promote belonging and connection amongst students,” are open to all students and have been active on campus for more than 10 years.Â