ReportWire

Tag: Charlie Kirk

  • Workers fired, placed on leave for Charlie Kirk comments after assassination

    [ad_1]

    The killing of Charlie Kirk is sparking debate about political violence in the U.S., as well as the kinds of professional repercussions employees who speak out about the conservative activist’s death — and other hot- button issues — might face.  

    A number of businesses and other organizations have shown employees the door this week because of their public remarks about Kirk, who was assassinated on Wednesday while giving a speech at Utah Valley University. Among those to lose their jobs or face other sanctions: a political pundit, a university employee, a sports reporter and a U.S. secret service agent.

    Private employers have the law on their side when it comes to removing a worker who makes public statements that the business views as potentially harmful, according to legal experts.

    “A private company can generally fire an employee for public comments, even political ones, if those comments are deemed to harm the company’s reputation, violate workplace policy or disrupt the business,” workplace attorney Marjorie Mesidor told CBS MoneyWatch.

    Multiple firings

    Employees in a range of industries, as well as in academia, are finding themselves in hot water over remarks they made about Kirk’s death or his political beliefs. 

    PHNX Sports, an online sports news site focused on Arizona, announced the firing of reporter Gerald Bourguet after he said on social media on Wednesday, in a since-deleted post, that “Refusing to mourn a life devoted to that cause is not the same thing as celebrating gun violence.”

    “Truly don’t care if you think it’s insensitive or poor timing to decline to respect an evil man who died,” he added. 

    Bourguet declined to comment when reached by CBS MoneyWatch.

    MSNBC said it cut ties with analyst Matthew Dowd after he said in an on-air conversation that Kirk had pushed incendiary speech and that “hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions.” In a public statement, Comcast accused Dowd of making “an unacceptable and insensitive comment about this horrific event.” 

    “That coverage was at odds with fostering civil dialogue and being willing to listen to the points of view of those who have differing opinions. We should be able to disagree, robustly and passionately, but, ultimately, with respect. We need to do better,” Comcast executives said.  

    Dowd, the former chief strategist for Republican President George W. Bush, apologized in a Substack post on Friday, saying he hadn’t meant to imply Kirk was to blame for the violence that killed him, the AP reported. But Dowd, a long-time political analyst at ABC News before joining MSNBC in 2022, also accused the network of caving to pressure to fire him. 

    “The right wing media mob ginned up, went after me on a plethora of platforms, and MSNBC reacted to that mob,” he wrote on Substack. “Even though most at MSNBC knew my words were being misconstrued, the timing of my words forgotten … and that I apologized for any miscommunication on my part, I was terminated by the end of the day.”

    Middle Tennessee State University said in statement that it had fired a university employee over “inappropriate and callous comments on social media concerning the horrific and tragic murder of Charlie Kirk.”

    Nasdaq, in a statement posted on X, said it dismissed an employee over social media posts related to Kirk’s shooting that the stock exchange said “were a clear violation of our policy.”

    In a Facebook post, the U.S. Secret Service said it placed an agent who it said expressed negative opinions about Kirk on leave. “The U.S. Secret Service will not tolerate behavior that violates our code of conduct. This employee was immediately put on administrative leave, and an investigation has begun,” a U.S. Secret Service spokesperson said in a statement.

    United Airlines told CBS News that it took action against employees who the company said had publicly commented on Kirk’s death. “Our mission at United Airlines is to connect people and unite the world. So we’ve been clear with our customers and employees that there’s zero tolerance for politically motivated violence or any attempt to justify it,” the carrier said in a statement to CBS News. 

    U.S. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy applauded United for “for doing what’s right by placing pilots celebrating the assassination of Charlie Kirk out of service. They must be fired,” in a statement on X. 

    “There’s no room for political violence in America and anyone applauding it will face the consequences. ESPECIALLY those we count on to ensure the safety of the flying public,” Duffy wrote. 

    Few protections 

    First Amendment protections are generally limited for workers in the private sector, according to attorneys. 

    “Employers often have a strong legal basis to terminate an employee if their public comments, especially on a high-profile and sensitive topic like a murder, cause reputational damage or customer backlash,” Mesidor said.

    Some states — California, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, South Carolina and West Virginia — do have laws to protect employees from being fired for their conduct off the job, including their political speech and activity, but most do not. Maynard Nexsen attorney Andrew Kragie told CBS MoneyWatch that workers at private employers typically have little protection from punishment for their public comments.

    “If someone says, ‘Thank goodness this person was assassinated,’ then generally their employer can fire them,” he said. That’s because most workers are employed at-will, meaning either party can terminate the contract at any time, for any reason, he explained. 

    “So, most employees in the private sector can be disciplined based on what you say on social media, even if your account doesn’t identify you as an employee,” Kragie added.

    contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Steve Bannon urges investigation of Spencer Cox after Charlie Kirk shooting

    [ad_1]

    Steve Bannon has called for an investigation into Utah Governor Spencer Cox following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    Newsweek reached out to Cox’s office for comment via email.

    Why It Matters

    Kirk, 31, was assassinated during a speech at Utah Valley University on September 10 during his “American Comeback Tour.” A suspect, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, is in custody. Kirk was a vocal supporter of President Donald Trump and played a key role in organizing young Republican voters.

    What To Know

    Cox has earned bipartisan praise for his response to the assassination, but some more MAGA-aligned conservatives, such as Bannon, have been more critical. During an episode of his War Room podcast, the former White House chief strategist called on Cox to be investigated over the state’s mental health initiatives.

    No law enforcement has suggested Cox has done any wrongdoing to warrant an investigation.

    During an interview with Sheila Matthews, a co-founder of a conservative parental rights group, Bannon raised concerns about Intermountain Support Coordination Services, a company that is contracted by the state to provide services for individuals who have disabilities. Robinson’s mother, Amber Robinson, is a social worker who has reportedly worked for the company.

    “Cox should be investigated. Why the White House—and they’re saying we had nothing to do with this guy, but even the first time, when [FBI Director Kash Patel] flew out there, why was he allowed to have a speaking role? Who made that decision? He needs to be investigated. [Robinson’s] mother needs to be investigated,” Bannon said.

    Steve Bannon speaks during the Semafor World Economy Summit 2025 in Washington, D.C. on April 23, 2025.

    Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

    Bannon also raised concerns about Cox’s stance on LGBTQ+ rights, as the governor has been viewed as more moderate on the matter. He has previously declined to sign some anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, leaving him at odds with more conservative Republicans.

    Robinson lived with a transgender roommate and romantic partner who is helping police in the investigation. Cox said the roommate “had no idea that this was happening.”

    Kirk was previously critical of Cox, calling on him to be “expelled from the Republican Party” after he declined to sign into law a bill to ban transgender girls from participating in girls’ sports.

    What People Are Saying

    Utah Governor Spencer Cox, during a press conference last week: “Social media is a cancer on our society right now, and I would encourage people to log off, turn off, touch grass, hug a family member. Go out and do good in the community.”

    Journalist Chris Cillizza, on X: “The country (and the world) now know the Utah governor’s name — due to the assassination of Charlie Kirk in the Beehive State on Wednesday. And what they’ve seen is a politician less interested in blame than in soothing. An elected official focused on empathy rather than political point-scoring.

    “At the moment, we have a politics perfectly suited to our modern the attention economy. People who yell or bully or say vile things or ignore norms are rewarded — more fundraising dollars, more TV time, more ‘fame.’ It has created a downward spiral where our politicians seem to value trolling the other side more than actually engaging with them.

    “But, Spencer Cox deserves credit — whether or not he is going to be a major player for Republicans in 2028 (or ever). Because he is doing the hardest thing in politics: Refusing to take the easy road.”

    Governor Josh Shapiro, a Pennsylvania Democrat, on CBS News: “We are at a pivotal moment in this country, and we need leaders to step up and speak and act with moral clarity, not to use the rhetoric of vengeance, but to use words of healing. That’s exactly what Spencer has been doing over the past few years. Actually, he’s been doing it over the last number of years.”

    What Happens Next

    Charges against Robinson are expected to be filed this week.

    Turning Point USA is set to hold a memorial for Kirk at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on September 21.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why a Government Shutdown Really Might Happen This Time

    [ad_1]

    Will things go dark on October 1?
    Photo: Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg/Getty Images

    To a lot of people, the prospect of a government shutdown whenever federal funding is on the brink of being interrupted is like the threat of an apocalyptic earthquake: something often discussed but rarely experienced. Somehow or other, even in a time of vast partisan polarization, the politicians find ways to keep the government operating, in part because no one wants to get blamed for the human suffering and widespread inconveniences associated with a shutdown.

    We’re facing another “shutdown crisis” at the end of this month as the stopgap spending bill enacted in March expires on September 30. And though we’re just a couple of weeks away from the fish-or-cut-bait moment, Republicans and Democrats are not even negotiating over a temporary, much less permanent, resolution. Democrats are acutely aware that a spending bill to keep the government open is their only point of leverage in a Congress where nearly every other kind of business is conducted via special rules that prohibit Senate filibusters. On this and only this occasion, Republicans need Democratic votes. But in a nearly identical situation in March, the GOP offered zero concessions to get those votes, and after lots of empty talk about resistance, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer rounded up enough votes from his party to help Republicans break a brief filibuster and have their way.

    The palpable fury of Democratic activists at Schumer’s “surrender,” and six more months of Trump power grabs with the connivance of the Republican Congress, have made Democrats far more willing to risk blame for a shutdown unless they get real concessions. They seem to have largely agreed on an extension of soon-to-expire Obamacare premium subsidies needed to head off huge insurance-cost spikes for millions of Americans as the minimum trophy they must secure before agreeing to keep the government open. But Republicans, who are divided on the Obamacare subsidies, have adopted the tack of offering (or demanding) a “clean CR,” a simple extension of current government spending levels until November 20, allegedly to give Congress more time to work out individual appropriations bills that will set funding levels for the next year. That means no concessions or even “sweeteners” for Democrats for the time being.

    So the big question now is whether Democrats will go for a short-term “clean CR” on grounds they really haven’t “caved,” they’ve just given themselves more time to put pressure on the people running the country. But for the moment, the two parties in Congress are talking past each other with each side accusing the other of an unwillingness to negotiate.

    There are additional irritants at play that didn’t exist back in March. The serial defiance of Congress’s spending power by the Trump administration has actually intensified as OMB director Russell Vought asserts the power to withhold previously approved funding for programs the administration doesn’t like. And while the authoritarian nature of Trump 2.0 was already becoming evident in March, it’s now an established fact that the president is pushing all known boundaries to presidential power to the breaking point with (so far) cooperation from the U.S. Supreme Court. The other recent development that may make it harder than ever for Democrats to cut any bipartisan spending deal is Trump’s big push to tip the scales in the 2026 midterm elections by getting red states like Texas, Missouri, Indiana, Florida, and South Carolina to redraw congressional maps that were supposed to last a decade in order to give the GOP more House seats (with a retaliatory re-redistricting occurring in California and perhaps some other blue states).

    There’s a new wild card in the deck after last week’s assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. In an Oval Office address, the president essentially blamed the murder on “the radical left,” a term he uses interchangeably with “Democrats,” and threatened unspecific but drastic action to avenge Kirk’s death. Will this further poison any negotiations between Republicans and Democrats? Will it make Democrats more determined to make a stand, or more fearful of inadvertently giving Donald Trump a pretext for even more authoritarian conduct? Compared with the current atmosphere, the gut check for Democrats in March was child’s play.


    See All



    [ad_2]

    Ed Kilgore

    Source link

  • Clemson Professor Calls For More Assassinations

    [ad_1]



    Clemson University is standing by at least three professors who were caught celebrating the assassination of civil rights leader Charlie Kirk, including one professor who called for the outright murder of all conservatives.

    “In a world full of Charlie Kirks and Brian Thompsons, be a Tyler Robinson or a Luigi Mangione,” wrote one Clemson staffer.

    President Trump shared a post on Truth Social accusing the university of inciting violence against conservatives and called on the South Carolina legislature to hold a special session to deal with the controversy.

    The university confirmed that one person had been suspended.

    “Effective immediately, an employee has been suspended pending further investigation into social media posts. This action reflects the seriousness with which Clemson approaches violations of its standards and values,” Clemson said in a statement. “As this is a personnel matter, no further details will be disclosed at this time. Clemson University remains committed to upholding the principles of the U.S. Constitution and the employment laws of the State of South Carolina.”

    Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) says that’s not enough.

    “Clemson must hold ALL accountable,” she wrote on X. “Suspension is not enough. Call an emergency meeting of the Board of Trustees. SC Legislature should call a special session to defund Clemson until they do what is right, ethically and morally. No radicalization of our kids in colleges. Enough is enough.”

    Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) added his voice to the growing number of outraged taxpayers.

    “Your First Amendment rights do not include a right to a job,” he wrote on X. “Clemson’s professors were completely inappropriate. The vile and disgusting celebration of a murder must compel the university to take clear and immediate action.”

    The Board of Trustees is expected to hold an emergency meeting later Monday.

    “Sadly, this comes from the tone Clemson set by not immediately firing the employees who glorified political violence,” Rep. Ralph Norman wrote on X. “Other universities have fired employees and expelled students for this behavior. For the safety of the students, Clemson must take action or lose every cent of funding.”

    Syndicated with permission from ToddStarnes.com – founded by best-selling author and journalist Todd Starnes. Starnes is the recipient of an RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award and the Associated Press Mark Twain Award for Storytelling.

    [ad_2]

    Todd Starnes

    Source link

  • JD Vance hosting “The Charlie Kirk Show” today after Kirk’s assassination

    [ad_1]

    Washington — Vice President JD Vance is hosting “The Charlie Kirk Show” Monday after Kirk was shot and killed last week at Utah Valley University.

    Vance announced Sunday in a post on X that he had the “honor of hosting the Charlie Kirk Show” to “pay tribute to my friend.” Speaking from his office in the White House complex Monday, Vance said he was “filling in for somebody who cannot be filled in for” as he kicked off the show.


    “But I’m going to try to do my best,” Vance said.

    Kirk, a conservative activist, was assassinated last week during a university event hosted by his organization, Turning Point USA, in Orem, Utah. The 31-year-old was close to Vance, along with President Trump and his family. 

    After his death, Kirk’s body was flown on the vice president’s plane, Air Force Two, to Kirk’s home state of Arizona. Vance canceled a planned trip to New York to mark 24 years since the Sept. 11, 2001, attack to fly to Utah to retrieve Kirk’s body. Vance said Monday that he was honored to be able to “take Charlie’s remains from Utah to Arizona.”

    Vance has described his longtime friendship with Kirk, who was also a key ally in his political rise. Vance said in a post on X after Kirk’s death that the slain conservative activist was one of the first people he called when he considered running for Senate in 2021, and he said Kirk advocated for him to become the vice presidential nominee “both in public and private.” 

    The vice president described Kirk as a “true friend.” On Monday, Vance called Kirk “the smartest political operative I ever met,” saying “I owe so much to Charlie.”

    Charlie Kirk moderates a conversation with Vice President JD Vance during Turning Point Action’s Chase the Vote campaign event at Generation Church in Mesa, Arizona, on Sept. 4, 2024.

    REBECCA NOBLE/AFP via Getty Images


    Kirk’s youth turnout operation has also been credited with helping Mr. Trump’s 2024 election bid, while Kirk himself was known to have influenced some of the Trump administration’s personnel decisions. Vance said much of “the success we’ve had in this administration traces directly to Charlie’s ability to organize and convene,” adding that Kirk “didn’t just help us win in 2024, he helped us staff the entire government.”

    Andrew Kolvet, the executive producer of “The Charlie Kirk Show,” said on CNN Monday that Vance’s hosting of the show “came about because he asked if he could do it.”

    “Charlie and JD were friends. They were actual friends,” Kolvet said, adding that “a lot of the people that are running the federal government are personal friends of Charlie’s and they were in the trenches together, the campaign, and they’ve known each other for years.”

    The president announced last week that he would award Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously. A memorial service for Kirk is set to be held on Sept. 21 in Arizona.

    Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, said in her first public remarks since his death that “the movement my husband built will not die,” noting that “the radio and podcast show that he was so proud of will go on.” 

    “If you thought that my husband’s mission was powerful before, you have no idea,” she said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Social media didn’t kill Charlie Kirk

    [ad_1]

    In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, a new cottage industry of rage has arisen. And while anger and horror at this act of violence are understandable, they’re also taking Americans to some dark places, where retribution must be had against anyone who said negative things about Kirk after his death and politicians posture about punishing people who (crassly, but nonviolently) celebrated Kirk’s death. A lot of this seems to hinge on the idea that hateful “rhetoric” is responsible for Kirk’s killing; one particularly prevalent strain of this specifically indicts online speech and social media.

    It’s social media that led to Kirk’s assassination, the refrain goes, and it’s social media that’s driving all sorts of political violence.

    But social media platforms don’t kill people. People kill people.

    That seems banal to point out, I know. Reductive, perhaps. But so much discourse right now attributes an almost supernatural influence to social media and to online speech and communities. And that’s reductive, too—in addition to being pretty unmoored from reality.

    “I believe that social media has played a direct role in every single assassination and assassination attempt that we have seen over the last five, six years,” said Utah Gov. Spencer Cox on Meet the Press yesterday. Social media companies “have figured out how to hack our brains” and “get us to hate each other,” Cox said.

    It’s not just politicians spewing a mind-control theory of political violence. “I think the main problem here isn’t this killer’s ideology,” posted the pundit Noah Blum on Friday. “It’s that the internet radicalizes people to do increasingly greater violence on a scarily regular basis and nobody really knows what to do about it.”

    We hear some version of this in the aftermath of many tragic or senseless events. It’s not enough for people to blame disturbed or immoral individuals who do bad things. It’s not even enough to blame the dubious influence of “right-wing extremism” or “left-wing extremism” or “political polarization.” People blame tech companies, sometimes even suggesting they’re directly responsible because they failed to stop hateful speech—or misinformation, or divisive rhetoric—on social media.

    But the idea that people—especially young men—would not be radicalized if it weren’t for social media belies most of human history.

    I’ve been listening recently to a podcast called A Twist of History. One episode details Adolf Hitler’s attempt to overthrow the Weimar Republic in 1923. Another episode features a riot during a Shakespearean performance in New York City in 1849, fomented by Ned Buntline, a nativist newspaper pundit with ambitions of fame and notoriety. Both instances featured fringe political elements, violence, and deaths.

    History is littered with examples like these: men driven to violence by people in close physical proximity, sometimes with the help of inflammatory political rhetoric printed in pamphlets and newspapers.

    The type of violence that people engage in does seem somewhat era-dependent. Sometimes it was more likely to be large group violence, acting as part of political movements or criminal gangs. Sometimes it was more likely to be small group violence, committed by racist clubs, radical activist groups, and so on. (And, surely, many manically violent men throughout history have been killed in wars or bar fights before they had a chance to do other damage.)

    Ours is an era of lone-wolf violence, though it is not the first one.

    Because of our hyper-connected world, and because of the sensationalistic nature of public shootings, it can feel like things are worse than ever. In another time, we wouldn’t have have heard of every racist lynching, every street gang fight, and so on.

    But even from what we can glean, looking back, it seems clear that we’re not living in some exceptionally violent time.

    Is the internet capable of radicalizing people?

    On some level, the answer is yes, of course. But this is simply because the internet, and social media, are such huge parts of our lives. They are where people spend time, spread ideas, and consume ideologies. They are locusts of just about everything good, and everything bad, about our offline world.

    “The internet is culture now, the way television once was for our parents, our grandparents, maybe even us,” Katherine Dee wrote on her Substack this week. “Every aspect of our lives flows through it. There’s no such thing as ‘very Online’ or ‘not Online.’ It’s all of us, all the time, always.”

    People will point to algorithms and profit motives, epistemic closure and endless scroll—all sorts of things that supposedly make social media or the internet generally a unique breeder of polarization and radicalism and misinformation. But we have an ever-growing body of research suggesting that, for the average person, being on social media isn’t making things worse (and, in some ways, could be making it better).

    We live in ideologically charged and politically polarized times. A lot of our media and our political debates and our discussions with each other reflect this. But the fact that so much of this comes seeping out on social media may simply be a symptom.

    Online speech is the most visible manifestation of any rot in our system or culture. But it does not mean that Facebook, or TikTok, or X, or any of the countless niche forums out there are the cause of the rot.

    Yes, the shooter was steeped in internet meme culture, as evidenced by messages printed on his bullets: “an internet-specific brand of trollish nihilism adopted by many recent shooters,” as my colleague C.J. Ciaramella put it. But I think it’s foolish—a combination of determined presentism, tech panic, and lack of imagination—to suggest that Kirk’s shooter pulled the trigger only because of ideas or attitudes that he encountered online.

    For one thing, we can’t actually say what spawned the shooter’s idea that assassinating someone was a good idea, or his belief that Kirk was an appropriate symbolic target for his agenda. Maybe people around him offline encouraged it. Maybe voices in his head told him to. At this point, we don’t know.

    But if he encountered bad ideas online, it’s because the internet is now where we encounter ideas. If he cloaked his violence in the language of internet memes, it’s because that’s where culture is these days.

    In another era, he may have encountered bad ideas at a town hall and dressed up his horrific act in different slogans. But a man with a capacity for such premeditated and dramatic violence is a man with a capacity for such things in any era. And conversely, countless billions of people encounter the same online ecosystem without committing assassinations.

    Reaching for modern technology as the explanation reeks of an ideological agenda of its own.

    None of this is to say that particular vectors of online radicalization shouldn’t be identified. People can and should study such routes, and consider ways to combat them, just as their predecessors tried to stop people from being sucked into the Ku Klux Klan, the mob, and so on. But looking for particular pathways here (if such a thing can be done) is different from condemning social media and the internet universally. We might as well have blamed the buildings where extremists gathered, or the paper and ink that allowed them to communicate.

    “Social media is simply the way we talk and communicate in this day and age, for better or worse,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said yesterday on ABC’s This Week. “What I would focus on is condemning the act of violence. It’s not the free speech that led to this. It’s not the fact that people can talk and communicate online. It’s the actions of an unhinged, evil individual.”

    More Sex & Tech News

    @seungminkim/X

     

    • Kaytlin Bailey, founder and executive director of the sex worker rights group Old Pros, will be debating Melanie Thompson of the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women about whether paying for sex should be a crime. The debate, part of the Soho Forum, is happening live tonight in Manhattan and will also be livestreamed on Reason’s YouTube channel.

    • The Trump administration is referring to birth control as an abortifacient (that is, something that causes abortion). “President Trump is committed to protecting the lives of unborn children all around the world,” a United States Agency for International Development spokesperson told The New York Times when asked about birth control pills, IUDs, and hormonal implants that had been slated for low-income countries. “The administration will no longer supply abortifacient birth control under the guise of foreign aid.”

    • “Federal regulators and elected officials are moving to crack down on AI chatbots over perceived risks to children’s safety. However, the proposed measures could ultimately put more children at risk,” writes Reason‘s Jack Nicastro.

    • Korean “comfort women” are suing the U.S. military.

    • “OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, is supporting a California proposal to impose age verification requirements on app stores and device-makers, adding to the chorus of tech giants praising the measure hours before state lawmakers’ deadline to approve bills for this year,” reports Politico.

    • A new study pitted some researchers against humans in debates and some against artificial intelligence chatbots. Can you guess who fared better? (The answer is not as straightforward as one might expect.)

    Today’s Image

    Turning Point USA booth at CPAC | 2014 (ENB/Reason)

    [ad_2]

    Elizabeth Nolan Brown

    Source link

  • Congress weighs $58M security funding as Charlie Kirk vigil planned for tonight amid deadline pressure

    [ad_1]

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has announced there will be a vigil in Statuary Hall of the Capitol tonight at 6:15 pm et to honor Charlie Kirk.

    While it is expected to be respectful, Capitol Hill is a tinderbox right now. Democrats and Republicans are still trading barbs at one another. Both sides are accusing the other of contributing to the hyper-toxic rhetoric. There are calls to “lower the temperature.” But remember, Congress is a thermometer — not a thermostat.

    We could have verbal jousting in and around the solemn ceremony tonight. Members could again unload on another when they filter back into the Capitol tonight. The complex is rife with tension.

    Members are concerned about personal security and how to safeguard themselves and their families — but there’s no concrete plan on what to do to protect lawmakers.

    THUNE’S SUITCASE NUKE- AND THE FILIBUSTER’S LATEST BLAST INJURY

    Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., speaks during a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    This brings us to government funding – and why security of lawmakers is a key part of that fight.

    Government funding expires at 11:59:59pm ET on Sept. 30. The House is scheduled to be out of session next week. Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown on September 23. So there is limited bandwidth for Congress before a shutdown.

    There is chatter that the House may try to advance a clean interim spending bill this week (a “CR”), which would run through Nov. 21.

    The bill would renew all funding from last year at current levels. But it would approve three “new” bills for the entire fiscal year covering agriculture, military construction/VA and the legislative branch.

    REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK: MILITARY WHISTLE-BLOWERS TESTIFY TO CONGRESS ABOUT UNEXPLAINED UFO ENCOUNTERS 

    U.S. Congress

    Fox has learned that the White House wants an extra $58 million for security for the administration and the courts in light of Charlie Kirk’s assassination. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    The latter is where there’s a problem.

    Fox is told that the White House wants an additional $58 million extra for security for the administration and the courts in light of the Kirk murder. They would match that with similar money to secure Congress. But some lawmakers may balk, saying that the matching $58 million is too low – similarly, because there are so many members of Congress and threats are off the charts. Fox is told that Congress will approve whatever security funding is necessary, but lawmakers must first determine what they want.

    “Figure out what you want and put it in the bill. It’s not something we are going to disagree on,” said one senior House source.

    That brings us to the Democrats’ quest for a “victory” in this spending round, especially since it is believed that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) caved and received nothing in the spring funding round.

    Schumer points during Democratic leadership press conference

    Democrats are requesting a renewal of the Obamacare subsidies, which are set to expire at the year-end.  (Pete Kiehart/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    The big request from Democrats is a renewal of Obamacare subsidies, which expire at the end of the year. If Congress fails to act, healthcare for tens of millions of Americans will rise sharply.

    Some Republicans are pushing for an extension of those subsidies, too. But Congressional Republicans are reluctant to attach the Obamacare subsidy renewal to a seven-week interim spending bill.

    In short, Republicans are waiting for Democrats to say what they want — and Democrats can’t figure that out. But rank-and-file Republicans are also waiting for their leadership to make a play call.

    One play call could be getting the House to vote on that clean CR, coupled with the three other spending bills, later this week.

    However, the House has the “three-day rule.” That requires legislation be posted for three days before the House votes. If the House is going to vote before its scheduled recess, then that would be Thursday. And that also means the House must vote to post the bill on Monday.

    House of Representatives

    The House currently has 432 members — 219 Republicans and 213 Democrats. (Chip Somodevilla)

    But exactly what the House may post is unclear.

    Moreover, it’s unclear if the House could even approve a stopgap spending package.

    It’s about the math.

    The House currently has 432 members: 219 Republicans and 213 Democrats. That means Republicans can only lose two on their side and pass the bill. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) – and perhaps others – are likely to oppose a Band-Aid spending bill. And Democrats may not vote yes because of all the reasons above. Plus, they are in the minority. They will expect the majority to “figure it out.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Such a scenario could only amplify tensions on Capitol Hill – which are already sky-high because of Kirk.

    Expect a lot more verbal jeering and disagreements from Congress before this is resolved.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Kristi Noem reacts to Charlie Kirk’s death: ‘Start focusing on each other’

    [ad_1]

    Kristi Noem said she believes that the killing of Charlie Kirk could be a turning point for the country.

    Kirk, a 31-year-old conservative political activist, was fatally shot Sept. 10 while speaking at Utah Valley University. The alleged shooter, Tyler Robinson, 22, was taken into custody following a two-day manhunt.

    “It feels like a grief has settled on not just the country, but the entire world. Something has changed,” Noem said in a Sept. 14 interview with Fox News host Maria Bartiromo. “My hope is that we will use this as an opportunity to come together and unify.”

    Noem, the Homeland Security secretary and former South Dakota governor, went on to criticize what she described as “rhetoric we’re seeing out of the left and out of political animals,” saying it’s “ugly and it’s bitter and it’s seeking to seize this opportunity to turn it into evil.”

    “I would just encourage everybody to start focusing on relationships, to start focusing on each other and talk about what Charlie believed in,” she said.

    Related: South Dakota political leaders offer prayers for slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk

    Noem also talked about her personal relationship with Kirk. She said he had the chance to meet her family, including her kids.

    “He was a special man who stood up and was bold enough to go speak to people who disagreed with him,” she said. “We need more of that today. More civil discourse rather than some of the violence that we’ve seen.”

    In a Sept. 14 post on Facebook, Noem wrote about the grief she felt after learning about Kirk’s death.

    “Before, I have felt isolated in my grief, but this grief feels collective – millions of people’s hearts breaking and wishing they could carry some of the burden for Charlie’s family and dearest loved ones,” she wrote.

    Noem also described some of her personal interactions with Kirk.

    “I remember being so impressed by his talents when I first met him,” she wrote. “He had a skill set and knowledge I didn’t have and he became an encourager for me over the years.”

    Noem was in her second term as South Dakota’s governor when she left to become President Donald Trump’s Homeland Security secretary. Kirk was “deeply involved” in the vetting process for top positions in Trump’s administration, ABC News reported.

    This article originally appeared on Sioux Falls Argus Leader: Kristi Noem reacts to Charlie Kirk death, talks personal interactions

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Vigils for Charlie Kirk planned by Turning Point USA chapters at UC and Miami University

    [ad_1]

    Memorials for activist Charlie Kirk are planned at Miami University and the University of Cincinnati Sept 16.

    Vigils have been happening around the country in the wake of the Sept. 10 fatal shooting of Kirk in Utah. Kirk’s non-profit, Turning Point USA, has a presence at over 3,500 universities, according to its website.

    Ohio Republican gubernatorial candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, U.S. Sen. Jon Husted and Attorney General Dave Yost all spoke at a vigil in Columbus Sunday.

    Most vigils have been peaceful, but some videos have gone viral of racist groups demonstrating in Kirk’s memory. Videos from a march in Los Angeles show masked individuals chanting, “White man. Fight back.”

    Several vigils have already been held in the Greater Cincinnati region including a Clermont County event in Union Township that drew hundreds of people, according to social media posts.

    The Miami University chapter announced its memorial on its Instagram page, which has over 900 followers, saying that Kirk’s assassination was devasting, but would not stop the movement Kirk started.

    “This is country is not so much divided by Republicans and Democrats anymore, it’s divided by those who love the United States of America and those who seek to destroy it,” chapter president Cooper LeMaster said in video on the post. “We need you to join us in this battle for our country.”

    The Miami University event is scheduled for Sept. 16 at 8 p.m. at the Farmer School of Business.

    The University of Cincinnati event is scheduled at 8 p.m. on Sept. 16 on campus at the Bearcat Commons.

    On campuses across the country, Turning Point USA has promoted conservative causes. The nonprofit states its mission is to “restore traditional American values like patriotism, respect for life, liberty, family, and fiscal responsibility.”

    More events for Kirk are planned. On Sept. 17, Kentucky Rep. TJ Roberts is hosting a candlelight vigil at Burlington Commons in Boone County at 8 p.m.

    This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Charlie Kirk vigils in Ohio planned at UC and Miami University

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Charlie Kirk assassination suspect under special watch as investigators seek motive

    [ad_1]

    The suspect in the assassination of Charlie Kirk is under special watch in a Utah jail, days after he allegedly shot and killed the 31-year-old conservative activist.

    “Tyler Robinson is being housed in our special housing unit so that we can keep a close eye on him,” the Utah County Sheriff said in a statement Sunday. “He will remain on a special watch status until cleared by mental health, which may take several days.”

    Authorities will then decide which housing for him is appropriate and continue to monitor him in prison, the statement said.

    “This is done for various reasons ranging from: the types of crimes you’re booked on, behavioral issues, violent behavior, and/or suicidal comments made during the arrest,” the sheriff’s statement said. “The special housing unit has more close supervision as does our special watch.”

    The sheriff noted that he hadn’t been made aware of any suicidal concerns or comments regarding Robinson.

    Robinson, 22, is being held in the Utah County Jail. He was taken into custody last week on charges of aggravated murder, obstruction of justice and felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury, according to an inmate booking sheet from the Utah County Sheriff’s Office.

    Authorities are still working to identify a motive in the killing of Kirk, who was speaking at an outdoor debate at Utah Valley University when he was fatally shot in what authorities said was a “targeted attack” on Wednesday. 

    Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and two law enforcement sources said Robinson is “not cooperating” with authorities.

    “There will be official charges filed on Tuesday, and there will be much more evidence and information available then,” Cox said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “And again, we’re interviewing all kinds of people, everyone that knows him, and trying to learn more about what that motive actually was.”

    He said investigations learned that Robinson had left-leaning political beliefs and disliked Kirk. He also said Robinson’s partner was transgender but that he was unsure if it was relevant in the case.

    “The roommate was a romantic partner, a male transitioning to female,” Cox said. “I can say that he has been incredibly cooperative, this partner has been very cooperative, had no idea that this was happening.”

    Kirk co-founded the right-wing advocacy group Turning Point USA, which is headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona. People have gathered there to leave photos, flowers and other mementos at a memorial.

    Items are left at a memorial for Charlie Kirk at the headquarters of Turning Point USA on Sept. 14, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. 

    Eric Thayer/Getty Images


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Eye Opener: Authorities try to pin down a motive for the murder of activist Charlie Kirk

    [ad_1]

    Authorities try to pin down a motive for the murder of activist Charlie Kirk. Also, massive protests fill the streets of London as demonstrators clash with police. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Gallatin community, Riley Gaines gather to honor Charlie Kirk: ‘Revival is new life. This is the turning point’

    [ad_1]

    Conservative media personality Riley Gaines and Sumner County Mayor John Isbell were among the speakers at a Gallatin community vigil held in honor of Charlie Kirk on the evening of Sept. 14.

    Kirk, a conservative political commentator and founder of Turning Point USA, was fatally shot at a Utah Valley University event Sept. 10. He was 31.

    Hundreds gathered outside the Sumner County Administrative Building for the event, which began about 5:30 p.m. Some wore white T-shirts with the word “Freedom” printed across, the same shirt Kirk was wearing when he was killed. Others carried handmade signs and American flags.

    “I know, I am certain that he is looking down, sitting right beside his creator right now and smiling at the sight of what is happening here in Sumner County, and across the nation, really across the globe,” Gaines said about Kirk.

    Kirk, who was from Arlington Heights, Illinois, was speaking during his “prove me wrong” table at his American Comeback Tour stop at Utah Valley when he was fatally shot. He was taken by his security team to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the FBI said during a news conference Sept. 10. Democrats and Republicans in Tennessee have condemned the shooting in the past several days.

    Sumner County Mayor John Isbell said at the Sept. 14 vigil that Kirk’s death should inspire others to come closer to the Christian faith and called him a martyr.

    “Tonight I want everyone to reflect on the following: What if the blood of a martyr, yes, a modern one, is not the end of a story but the beginning of a revival?” he said, refering to what Christians believe is a period of fervent activity in the church.

    Rita Brewer attends a vigil held for Charlie Kirk outside the Sumner County Administrative Building in Gallatin Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

    “What if this tragedy awakens a generation? What if it calls us, once and for all, to stop chasing comfort and start living courageously? What if Charlie’s death becomes a spark that lights a holy fire across this nation?”

    Multiple speakers, including Pastor Todd Coconato of Leaves of Healing Church, called for the crowd to commit to a renewed dedication to their Christian faith and values.

    “Revival is new life. This is the turning point,” he said, referring to the policital organization founded by Kirk.

    What did Riley Gaines say at Gallatin Charlie Kirk vigil?

    Gaines, a media personality and conservative political commentator, said she wasn’t prepared to speak at the vigil but felt called to share some words after seeing familiar faces in the audience.

    The former collegiate swimmer is originally from Gallatin and graduated from University of Kentucky. She built her political platform after openly criticizing the National Colegiate Athletic Association for allowing University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas to compete in the women’s division. Thomas is transgender and tied with Gaines for fifth place in the 200-yard freestyle final at the 2022 NCAA swimming championships.

    Riley Gaines speaks at a vigil held for Charlie Kirk outside the Sumner County Administrative Building in Gallatin Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

    Riley Gaines speaks at a vigil held for Charlie Kirk outside the Sumner County Administrative Building in Gallatin Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

    Gaines became friends with Kirk and joined him in May for his San Fransisco State University American Comeback tour stop.

    “I’ll be honest, I would have been there,” she said at the vigil. “I would have been sitting in that chair right beside Charlie if I wasn’t 39 weeks pregnant. Scary, scary thought.”

    Gaines said Kirk had done more for Gen Z than any other person, that he “made MAGA cool” and was the reason Donald Trump was elected president.

    “His impact cannot be understated,” she said.

    Gaines also echoed the words of Kirk’s wife Erika Kirk, who published a nearly 20-minute long video after the shooting. Gaines said she was thrilled to hear Erika Kirk say that Charlie Kirk’s political movement would not die with him. Gaines, like Erika Kirk, used plural language to refer to “people” responsible for Kirk’s death.

    “They killed a man, a father of two, a husband, a Christian because they disagreed with him politically,” Gaines said. “That could have been any of us.”

    “Erika, in her remarks, she put it so perfectly,” Gaines continued. “She said, ‘The evildoers have no idea what they’ve done because they have started a revival among Christians and conservatives.”

    Shooting suspect Tyler Robinson, 22, is in police custody. According to early reports from authorities, the shooter acted alone, but the investigation is ongoing.

    Gallatin residents say they feel they ‘knew’ Kirk

    Gallatin residents Donna Drake, 55, Alicia Georgiou, 60 and Kelsie Olson, 34, went to the vigil together. They said they were compelled to attend because they felt connected to Kirk.

    “We didn’t know him,” Olson said through tears.

    “But you felt like your soul knew him,” Drake said.

    The trio said they felt connected to Kirk through their shared Christian beliefs, and Drake said she agreed with his “whole message.”

    “I think part of it is that I respected the fact that no matter what his beliefs were, he was about open dialogue and encouraged hearing from people who had different beliefs,” Georgiou said. “And what better blessing than that?”

    Taylor Free, the organizer for a vigil held for Charlie Kirk outside the Sumner County Administrative Building, speaks during the event in Gallatin Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

    Taylor Free, the organizer for a vigil held for Charlie Kirk outside the Sumner County Administrative Building, speaks during the event in Gallatin Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

    Olson added that she feels the country is in a “very dark time” after Kirk’s death.

    “I think this has shifted history and we can kind of go one of two ways,” she said. “And I’m scared for my kids’ future. And I think just seeing people come together gives me hope that there’s a lot more good than evil.”

    Event organizer Taylor Free closed the vigil by playing a synthetic audio clip that imitated Kirk’s voice. In the clip, Kirk said he wanted to introduce listeners to his “new friends,” which were computer-generated voices Christian martyrs throughout history, like Paul the Apostle, Andrew the Apostle and Saint Peter.

    “My brothers and sisters, group yourself in a Bible-believing church, pray for your enemies, for our battle is spiritual,” Kirk’s synthetic voice said. “It’s time to awaken your faith. Rise up, speak truth without fear and overwhelm the world for Jesus.”

    This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Riley Gaines, Gallatin gather to honor Charlie Kirk: ‘His impact cannot be understated’

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • ‘Gradually and then suddenly’: Reagan speechwriter talks political violence in aftermath of Kirk’s death

    [ad_1]

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk signals a troubling new chapter in America’s political violence, former Reagan speechwriter Peggy Noonan said.

    Kirk, 31, died after he was shot in the neck during his “American Comeback Tour” at Utah Valley University on Wednesday. The assassination comes a year after two attempts to take the president’s life

    “We like to say that something happened gradually and then suddenly,” Noonan wrote in the Wall Street Journal on Thursday. “It’s from Ernest Hemingway’s ‘The Sun Also Rises’: A character, asked how he went bankrupt, says, ‘Two ways, gradually and then suddenly.’ That’s how political violence in America has been growing in this century. I would say the 2024 assassination attempts on Donald Trump, and now the assassination of Kirk, are the ‘suddenly’ moments. The reality continues while the dark tempo is picking up.”

    CHARLIE KIRK WARNED ‘ASSASSINATION CULTURE IS SPREADING ON THE LEFT’ IN EERIE ONLINE POST MONTHS BEFORE MURDER

    Kimberly Atkins Stohr, a senior opinion writer for The Boston Globe, and Peggy Noonan, a columnist for The Wall Street Journal, appear on “Meet the Press” in Washington D.C., Sunday, Jan. 7, 2024.  (William B. Plowman/NBC via Getty Images)

    “We know this can’t continue and we don’t know how to stop it,” Noonan wrote. “That is our predicament.”

    Noonan, now a columnist for the Wall Street Journal, previously served as former Presdient Ronald Reagan’s head speechwriter from 1984 to 1986. 

    Kirk’s assassination is one of multiple examples of political violence – or attempted political violence

    For example, 20-year-old gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks opened fire on Trump from a rooftop during a campaign rally in July 2024, and one of the eight bullets shot grazed Trump’s ear. The gunman also shot and killed Corey Comperatore, a 50-year-old firefighter, father and husband attending the rally, and injured two others.

    CHARLIE KIRK HAD ‘NO FEAR’ GOING INTO UTAH EVENT WHERE HE WAS ASSASSINATED, FRIEND SAYS

    President Donald Trump raises his fist after being shot at a campaign event in Butler, Pennsylvania.

    Then-Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pumps his fist as he is rushed offstage by Secret Service agents after being grazed by a bullet during a rally on July 13, 2024 in Butler, Pennsylvania.  (Getty Images/Anna Moneymaker)

    Likewise, Ryan Routh was apprehended and charged with attempting to assassinate Trump at his Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, in September 2024. Routh was charged with attempted assassination of a major presidential candidate, among other things, and his trial is currently underway. 

    Other instances include an assassination plot against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Nicholas John Roske, 29, pleaded guilty in April to attempting to kill Kavanaugh in June 2022, according to the Justice Department. 

    CHARLIE KIRK’S MURDER THE LATEST IN INCREASING POLITICAL VIOLENCE NATIONWIDE, FROM PA GOVERNOR TO SCOTUS

    Charlie Kirk on Utah Valley University campus

    Charlie Kirk speaks at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10, 2025 in Orem, Utah, prior to the assassination. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune/Getty Images)

    Trump said Friday on “Fox & Friends” that an arrest had been made in Kirk’s assassination, and Utah officials confirmed the suspect as 22-year-old Tyler Robinson.

    “I hope he’s going to be found guilty, I would imagine. And I hope he gets the death penalty,” Trump said Friday. “What he did, Charlie Kirk was the finest person, he didn’t deserve this. He worked so hard and so well. Everybody liked him.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Utah governor says the motive in Kirk shooting is not yet certain but the suspect was on the left – WTOP News

    [ad_1]

    D.C.’s Kennedy Center hosted an evening vigil that had a line of mourners wrapped around the building. Some people wore suits or summer dresses, while others wore jeans and sported “Make America Great Again” caps.

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Family and friends of the 22-year-old accused of fatally shooting conservative activist Charlie Kirk described his politics as veering left in recent years as he spent large amounts of time scrolling the “dark corners of the internet,” Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said Sunday.

    Investigators were still piecing together information about the suspect, Tyler Robinson, and not yet ready to discuss a potential motive. But Cox noted that Robinson, who is not cooperating with law enforcement, disliked Kirk and may have been “radicalized” online.

    Kirk founded Turning Point USA to bring more young, conservative evangelical Christians into politics as effective activists, and he was a confidant of President Donald Trump, leading to a flood of tributes that included a vigil Sunday night at the Kennedy Center in Washington. Kirk, a 31-year-old father of two, became prominent in part through his speaking tours, and he was shot Wednesday while speaking at Utah Valley University.

    “There clearly was a leftist ideology,” Cox said on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” citing interviews with Robinson’s relatives and acquaintances. “Friends have confirmed that there was kind of that deep, dark internet, the Reddit culture, and these other dark places of the internet where this person was going deep.”

    He pointed to references found engraved on the ammunition used to kill Kirk, which included anti-fascist and meme-culture language. Court records show that one bullet casing had the message, “Hey, fascist! Catch!”

    A Republican who has called on all partisans to tone down their rhetoric following the attack, the governor added: “I really don’t have a dog in this fight. If this was a radicalized MAGA person, I’d be saying that as well.”

    Utah’s governor says a motive still isn’t pinned down

    Cox stressed on several Sunday morning news shows that investigators are still trying to pin down a motive for the attack on Kirk, a Trump confidant. The governor said more information may come out once Robinson appears in court Tuesday.

    Cox said the suspect’s partner was transgender, which some politicians have pointed to as a sign Robinson was targeting Kirk for his anti-transgender views. But authorities have not said whether it is relevant as they investigate Robinson’s motive.

    “The roommate was a romantic partner, a male transitioning to female,” Cox said. “I can say that he has been incredibly cooperative, this partner has been very cooperative, had no idea that this was happening.”

    Investigators have spoken to Robinson’s relatives and carried out a search warrant at his family’s home in Washington, Utah, about 240 miles (390 kilometers) southwest of Utah Valley University.

    State records show Robinson is registered to vote but not affiliated with a political party and is listed as inactive, meaning he did not vote in the two most recent general elections. His parents are registered Republicans.

    The suspect grew up in southwestern Utah

    Robinson grew up around St. George, in the southwestern corner of Utah between Las Vegas and natural landmarks including Bryce Canyon and Zion National Parks.

    He became a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known widely as the Mormon church, at a young age, church spokesperson Doug Andersen said.

    Online activity by Robinson’s mother reflects an active family that traveled widely. In one photo, a young Robinson can be seen smiling as he grips the handles of a .50-caliber heavy machine gun outside a military facility.

    A high school honor roll student who scored in the 99th percentile nationally on standardized tests, he was admitted to Utah State University in 2021 on a prestigious academic scholarship, according to a video of him reading his acceptance letter that was posted to a family member’s social media account.

    But he attended for only one semester, according to the university. He is currently enrolled as a third-year student in the electrical apprenticeship program at Dixie Technical College in St. George.

    Tributes emphasize Kirk’s religious faith

    The vigil at the Kennedy Center was among numerous tributes to Kirk that also included moments of silence at professional sporting events. The line of mourners in Washington wrapped around the center. Some people wore suits or summer dresses, while others were dressed in jeans and wore “Make America Great Again” caps.

    Seventeen-year-old Domiano Maceri and his mother drove about 50 miles (80 kilometers) from Purceville, Virginia, to attend the Kennedy Center event. He said Kirk helped him find a way to better talk with friends who hold different opinions.

    “I definitely feel like I was inspired in different ways,” Maceri said as he waited to get inside. “It definitely gave me confidence to speak to my friends about my beliefs more.”

    Speakers included White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, two House members whose remembrances of Kirk were briefly stalled when they teared up, and House Speaker Mike Johnson.

    “Father, help us remember the principles of your word that Charlie worked every day — to advance that we not return evil for evil but we overcome evil with good,” Johnson prayed.

    At Dream City Church in Phoenix, where Kirk hosted one of his “Freedom Night in America” gatherings, attendees viewed clips of the conservative activist discussing his desire to be “remembered for courage for my faith.”

    During a question-and-answer session, a church pastor, Angel Barnett, called on the crowd to honor Kirk by carrying on his message.

    “The left is nervous,” Barnett said. “And they’re concerned because they’ve lost control. Charlie started that, and we will continue it.”

    Added church panelist Brandon Tatum: “These cowards thought that they could end or eliminate the movement.”

    “They just made it bigger. They just made it stronger.”

    ___

    Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press writer Jonathan Matisse in Nashville, Tennessee, and AP video journalist Mike Pesoli in Washington contributed to this report.

    Copyright
    © 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

    APTOPIX Charlie Kirk Prayer Vigil People wait in line for a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

    Charlie Kirk Prayer Vigil People wait in line for a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

    Charlie Kirk Prayer Vigil People wait in line for a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

    Charlie Kirk Prayer Vigil Kevin Vanriper, right, and his wife Barbara Vanriper, left, of Sarasota, Fla., join other people waiting in line for a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

    APTOPIX Charlie Kirk Prayer Vigil People hold candles and sing during a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

    Charlie Kirk Prayer Vigil People sing and pray during a memorial and prayer vigil for Charlie Kirk at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.

    [ad_2]

    WTOP Staff

    Source link

  • Van Hollen, Democrats in Iowa call for end to political violence after Kirk’s killing

    [ad_1]

    Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) speaks with Iowa state Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott, who is running for Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District, at the Polk County Democrats Steak Fry in Des Moines on Saturday. (Photo by Robin Opsahl/Iowa Capital Dispatch)

    Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) and Iowa congressional candidates took time Saturday at the Polk County Democrats’ Steak Fry to condemn political violence in the wake of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s killing in Utah.

    Van Hollen, gave a keynote address at event, an annual Iowa fundraiser that featured speeches from Democratic candidates for Iowa’s U.S. Senate race, as well as from the 3rd and 4th congressional district races. He spoke about Kirk’s death, saying the shooting is a reminder of “how fragile our democracy can feel,” while criticizing Trump’s response to the issue.

    On Wednesday, Kirk, the co-founder of Turning Point USA, was shot while answering a question at an event at Utah Valley University. The suspected gunman was identified and taken into custody Friday.

    Politicians and leaders mourned Kirk’s death and called for a change to prevent future politically motivated violence.

    “The answer cannot be more violence,” Van Hollen said. “The answer cannot be vengeance. And sadly, the president is using this moment not to unite America against political violence, but to engage in finger pointing.

    “But we will not be silenced. We will speak out for what we believe vigorously, courageously and peacefully,” he said.

    Iowa Democratic Party Chair Rita Hart said it has been a “really hard week” in light of Kirk’s death, and that Democrats, and all Americans, need to take steps to ensure these threats are eliminated.

    “We don’t have to look very far to see other examples of violence that has occurred because of political leanings,” Hart said, in part referring to the fatal shooting of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman in June. “And none of us find that to be acceptable, because it simply isn’t.

    SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

    “We live in a country that was founded on the principle that we could stand up in a place like this and express our feelings, our thoughts, our attitudes, our beliefs and our political leanings, and not get shot because we have an opinion or a thought that’s different than somebody else’s,” she said.

    In Iowa, there has been an outpouring of sympathy for Kirk’s family and calls to stop political violence. Speaking with reporters, Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate called for an end to political violence.

    In recent days, there has been some criticism from Republicans and others of Iowans, including some teachers, who have made controversial social media posts about Kirk’s death.

    Democratic Senate candidate Jackie Norris, the school board president for the Des Moines Public Schools, said political violence was unacceptable, and that teachers — alongside most people — should be more cognizant of what they are publicly posting on social media. However, Norris added, “we have to respect that people have different views,” including teachers.

    “It is important that we tone down the rhetoric, but we also have to respect that (teachers) have strong feelings too,” Norris said. “It’s a balance.”

    Van Hollen calls Democrats ‘spineless’ for not backing Mamdani

    Van Hollen also told Iowans at the event that winning in 2026 will mean Democrats must be outspokenly in support of Democratic candidates running in 2025 races — including New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani.

    The Maryland Democrat said Iowa would play an important role in the 2026 midterms — but that supporting Democrats in 2025 races for governor in Virginia and New Jersey, as well as for New York City mayor, will help build “momentum” for 2026.

    Van Hollen criticized New York Democrats for not supporting Mamdani, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America who won the Democratic mayoral primary. He said many Democrats representing New York in the U.S. House and Senate have “stayed on the sidelines” as President Donald Trump and others have mobilized to defeat the Democratic candidate.

    “That kind of spineless politics is what people are sick of,” Van Hollen said. “They need to get behind him and get behind him now.”

    Van Hollen criticized other aspects of the Democratic Party, saying the Biden administration was “feckless” in holding the Israeli government under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accountable to U.S. and international law. But he largely focused his remarks on Trump and Republicans in control of Congress.

    In addition to talking about Medicaid cuts and criticizing Trump’s foreign policy decisions, Van Hollen said the Trump administration was violating people’s constitutional rights by pursuing mass deportations. Van Hollen gained a significant national platform earlier in 2025 for his work involving Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland resident who was deported to El Salvador erroneously and held in prison there before being returned to the U.S. He is currently being held in Virginia by immigration authorities.

    Van Hollen was one of the major advocates for returning Abrego Garcia to this country and allowing his case to go through the U.S. court system. At Saturday’s event, he said he was advised not to pursue the issue, as immigration is not a winning topic for Democrats, but said he continued to fight for Abrego Garcia’s due process rights because “our democracy cannot survive on silence or equivocation.”

    “And lo and behold, Americans across the political spectrum do believe in the red, white and blue essential right to due process in the United States of America,” he said. “They do believe in the principle that no one in America — I mean, no one — should be disappeared by the state without having a chance before a court of law.
    “And Americans understand this is not about one man,” Van Hollen said. “It’s about all of us. Because when you strip away the rights from one person, you threaten the rights … of all of us.”

    Abrego Garcia has been returned to the U.S., though the Trump administration has said it intends to deport him again, potentially to the country of Eswatini, previously known as Swaziland.

    Van Hollen said he would “never, ever apologize for standing up for anybody’s constitutional rights,” and said Democrats need to do more to speak out on issues they believe are important, even if polls or pundits say the topics are not politically advantageous. This will be especially important in states like Iowa, he said.

    “We can and we will win here again, if — if — we speak to our core values, if we show people what we will stand up for and we will fight for,” Van Hollen said. “That’s why it’s great to be here to flip steaks and flip seats.”

    – This story originally appeared in Iowa Capital Dispatch, which is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Turning Point USA Chapters Mourn Charlie Kirk’s Death

    [ad_1]

    Irony abounded in the life — and death — of Charlie Kirk.

    A small group of college students, including women, gathered on the University of Houston campus last week to mourn Kirk’s death. The conservative Christian activist was known for his political debates on university campuses, even though he believed college was a “scam,” and supported young women prioritizing marriage over higher education.

    Kirk mobilized youth to vote for a national leader, President Donald Trump, who was in his late 70s at the time of the 2024 election. And he was an ardent supporter of the Second Amendment right to bear arms, before he died September 10 by gun violence.

    Kirk, 31, was fatally shot while speaking at Utah Valley University. He founded Turning Point USA, a conservative movement that condemns “woke” DEI hiring practices, civil rights for transgender individuals, and abortion. He was known for his college campus tours at which he debated students with whom he disagreed. A TikTok page for his podcast, “The Charlie Kirk Show,” has almost 9 million followers.

    UH student David Cantu said he found Kirk on social media and wanted to join the movement. “He made a big impact on our youth,” Cantu said. “I think he would want us to continue on what he started. Even though he can’t finish it, we can continue on.”

    In addition to last week’s vigil at the University of Houston campus, a community-wide prayer service was held Sunday evening at Discovery Green in downtown Houston, hosted by the Republican consulting group Red State Solutions.

    But a lot of people didn’t like Charlie Kirk, and his death created a stir, with some on the progressive, or liberal, side implying that the activist created a hostile environment that led to his demise. Despite this, many Democratic leaders, including Houston and Harris County officials, condemned gun violence and the actions of Kirk’s suspected shooter, 22-year-old Utah resident Tyler Robinson, who was apprehended Friday.

    Journalist and Howard University professor Stacey Patton said last week she was on Charlie Kirk’s “hit list,” a database of educators that Turning Point USA believes “discriminate against conservative students, promote anti-American values and advance leftist propaganda in the classroom.”

    “His so-called ‘Professor Watchlist,’ run under the umbrella of Turning Point USA, is nothing more than a digital hit list for academics who dare to speak truth to power,” Patton wrote on Facebook. “I landed there in 2024 after writing commentary that inflamed the MAGA faithful. And once my name went up, the harassment machine roared to life.”

    The professor said some educators received death threats; others lost their jobs or left universities because of the harassment. She said Kirk “demonized LGBTQ people, mocked gun violence survivors, spewed racism, and pushed policies that shorten lives.”

    “And now, in the wake of his shooting, there’s all this national outpouring of mourning, moments of silence, yellow prayer hands, and tributes painting him as a civil debater,” Patton said. “But the truth is that Kirk and his foot soldiers spent years terrorizing educators, trying to silence us with harassment and fear.”

    Kirk supporters called the shooting a political assassination and characterized the conservative leader as a martyr who died spreading the teachings of Jesus in civil, respectful debate. Several people shared stories of how their children admired Kirk and young boys wore coats and ties to middle school in Kirk’s honor on the day after his death.

    click to enlarge

    Students and Charlie Kirk supporters planted flags outside the Memorial Student Center on September 11.

    Photo by April Towery

    Trump said Kirk would receive a Presidential Medal of Freedom and ordered flags lowered through the weekend. The President took the same action in August following a school shooting in Minnesota, but didn’t order flags lowered when Minnesota Rep. Melissa Hortman, a Democrat, was assassinated in June, prompting critics to say Trump was engaging in “selective patriotism.”

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott offered his condolences and called for prayer for Kirk’s family.

    “Charlie’s voice was a beacon for millions of young Americans searching for truth, courage, and conviction,” Abbott said in a statement. “This senseless act of violence has no place in America. Our prayers are with Charlie’s family and his loved ones, especially the two young children he leaves behind. Texas stands with them in mourning and in honoring Charlie’s enduring legacy.”

    A quote from Kirk in April 2023 saying that he supported the right to bear arms was widely shared on social media.

    “I think it’s worth it,” Kirk said in a social media post more than two years ago. “I think it’s worth it to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights.”

    The University of Houston has a student chapter of Turning Point USA with about 20 active members. On the day of Kirk’s death, however, UH chapter president Jordyn Hackner said her phone was flooded with calls from people who wanted to join or offer assistance.

    “Yesterday was a really tough day,” Hackner, a sophomore, told a reporter before the vigil in Kirk’s honor. Students said they’d been instructed by Turning Point USA not to speak to the media about the circumstances surrounding Kirk’s death, but many spoke openly about his legacy and wept during the vigil.

    “I didn’t have the honor to meet Charlie or show him what our chapter looks like but we hope to pass on his legacy,” Hackner said as she broke down in tears.

    Texas Youth Summit founder Christian Collins led the group in prayer. The annual Texas Youth Summit is set for September 19 and 20 in The Woodlands and will feature Collins, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt, all Republicans, as speakers.

    Collins said Kirk was silenced by a shooter who was afraid of the truth. Kirk’s ideas weren’t outrageous, Collins said. He believed in two genders: man and woman. He probably would have become president one day, Collins added.

    “They took his life because millions of young people were listening to him,” Collins said. “I would say there was nobody who did more with young people in the history of our nation, especially with the Republican Party, than Charlie Kirk. He’s the reason, I think, that President Trump won the 2024 election. It’s because young men loved Charlie Kirk and they looked up to him. That’s their hero.”

    click to enlarge

    Christian Collins, founder of Texas Youth Summit, spoke to students at the University of Houston campus last week. Also pictured is UH student David Cantu.

    Photo by April Towery

    Past president of the UH Turning Point chapter Lauren Corrales broke down in tears as she described meeting Kirk and praying with him.

    Although college campus tours were his battleground, Kirk and his wife Erika made an appearance earlier this year at a Young Women’s Leadership Summit in Dallas, covered by the New York Times. Deemed “Trump World rock stars,” by the Times, the Kirks advised about 3,000 young women at the conference on finding a husband and raising Christian children.

    “I must have missed it in Matthew — which is, Go forth and become CEO of a shoe company,” Kirk reportedly told the audience. He asked attendees whether their “daily purpose for being” was finding a husband and instructed the room that “every hand should go up.”

    click to enlarge

    University of Houston students prepared a memorial for Charlie Kirk on September 11.

    Photo by April Towery

    Some in attendance were surprised by the appearance of Texas Sen. Angela Paxton, R-McKinney, a graduate of UH and a leadership consultant and former educator, at the conference where women were told to stay home and have babies. Shortly after the gathering, Angela Paxton filed for divorce from her husband, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

    At the September 11 memorial event on UH campus, Collins encouraged the college students to keep speaking out on what they believe in.

    “Conservatives are sometimes divided, but everyone in the conservative movement respected Charlie Kirk,” Collins said. “When there is a terrorist attack, people tend to curl up in a ball and cry. What Charlie Kirk would want is for us to keep fighting the good fight.”

    “We are in a war in this country. It is a spiritual and political war, and it is a cultural war,” he added. “We have to win. We need crusaders for truth. We need leaders who are not afraid. We cannot live in fear. We have to fight back.”

    [ad_2]

    April Towery

    Source link

  • 9/14: Sunday Morning

    [ad_1]

    Hosted by Jane Pauley. Featured: State fairs; a history of the U.S. Constitution; actor-director Jason Bateman on the Netflix series “Black Rabbit”; Marlon Wayans on the psychological horror film “Him”; historian Jon Meacham on the Charlie Kirk shooting; French Impressionist painter Gustave Caillebotte; an estate in Tuscany; and a funeral for dead houseplants.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Fact Check: DOCTORED Video Shows Trump Warning Left Not To Poke The Bear Commenting On Charlie Kirk’s Death — Satire

    [ad_1]

    Is this a real video of Presiden Trump saying the far right doesn’t exist and that “the left” is “poking a sleeping bear with sticks” in remarks on Charlie Kirk’s death? No, that’s not true: The viral clip contained AI generated sound that doesn’t match the original footage published by the White House and was published by an account the has the word “satire” in its bio. The authentic audio mentions neither bears nor Charlie Kirk .

    The claim appeared in a post (archived here) published on X on September 13, 2025. It opened:

    Trump warns: ‘Don’t poke the bear.’ Unreal.

    The post contained a video in which Trump appeared to be saying the following:

    I really shouldnt say it, but I think Ive got to say it. The far right in our country doesnt exist....yet. The far left, the loony tune brigade, however, is quite real.. real as real gets.. as serious as cancer. Cancer not good. But people forget that Im a moderate. Charlie was a moderate as well. But the psycho left has been poking a sleeping bear with sticks, calling the bear names, stealing the bears wallet, and theyve actually begun shooting the bear. But this isnt an ordinary bear, folks. No, no, its not. This, of course, is what scholars refer to as a metaphor. So if I was a miserable lefty, who hated my dad and thought John Oliver was a real looker, Id pause here and ask myself, do I want to keep poking this bear, or do I want my face ripped off in a horrific bear accident?

    This is what the post looked like on X at the time of writing:

    Image source: Lead Stories screenshot of post at x.com/MaverickDarby

    In reality, however, Trump did not say any of the words attributed to him in the clip on social media.

    A reverse image search led to the original footage published by the White House on September 2, 2025. In that recording, Trump announced the relocation of the U.S. Space Command headquarters to Huntsville, Alabama, and answered a series of questions, but none of them were related to the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk that would happen eight days later (archived here). For the same reason, Trump couldn’t have used the past tense to describe the political leanings of the then-alive activist.

    Lead Stories additionally searched the automatically generated transcript: In the authentic recording, Trump said nothing about bears or Charlie Kirk.

    Screenshot 2025-09-14 at 5.05.05 PM.png

    Image source: Lead Stories screenshot of video by the White House on YouTube.com

    Screenshot 2025-09-14 at 5.19.06 PM.png

    Image source: Lead Stories screenshot of video by the White House on YouTube.com

    Hiya, a tool from the InVid verification plugin, showed that the audio in the version of the recording that spread on social media was created by AI:

    Screenshot 2025-09-14 at 5.31.15 PM.png

    Image source: Lead Stories screenshot of the InVid verification plugin

    Furthermore, at the very final second, the clip from X itself showed a definition of the adjective “unreal”, hinting that the video was not authentic:

    Screenshot 2025-09-14 at 5.38.16 PM.png

    Image source: Lead Stories screenshot of post at x.com/MaverickDarby

    The bio of the @MavericDarby account on X (archived here) says it creates satire:

    Mostly satire. I make videos, but the podcast is 🎷

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Vigil for Charlie Kirk held in alleged gunman’s Utah hometown draws hundreds of mourners

    [ad_1]

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Hundreds gathered Sunday night in the Utah hometown of alleged gunman Tyler Robinson to honor Charlie Kirk, mourn with his family, and acknowledge the pain of Robinson’s relatives.

    Organizer Jordan Hess told the crowd he was “deeply moved” by their attendance. 

    “I’m grateful that everyone felt the desire and the need to be here in the spirit of community tonight,” he said, clearly emotional.

    Hess said the event was organized to “celebrate who we are as Americans – and to mourn … We gather today not as Democrats or Republicans, not as left or right, not as different races or believers of different religions but as citizens of the greatest, most enduring experiment of self-government that the world has ever known.”

    CHARLIE KIRK’S FRIEND URGES MOURNERS TO ‘GO BACK TO CHURCH’ FOLLOWING ACTIVIST’S KILLING

    Community members gather in Washington City, Utah, on Sept. 14, 2025, for a vigil honoring Charlie Kirk. (Fox News Digital)

    He noted the vigil was also about mourning Kirk’s life, mourning for his family, the family of the alleged shooter, the students who witnessed the tragedy, and “mourning what this moment threatens to say about the state of our union.”

    Whether or not people agreed with Kirk’s beliefs, “one truth remains, he was an American, a citizen, a son, a husband and maybe most importantly a voice. He bravely used his voice to advocate for things he believed in: faith, family and freedom,” Hess said. 

    He added that “political assassination is not just the taking of life, it is the attempted murder of dialogue,” imploring that people should be able to “disagree passionately without destroying one another.”

    UTAH LEADERS URGE UNITY FOLLOWING CHARLIE KIRK’S ASSASSINATION: ‘TURNING POINT FOR AMERICA’

    Charlie Kirk Vigil Washington City, Utah

    Community members gather in Washington City, Utah, on Sept. 14, 2025, for a vigil honoring Charlie Kirk. (Fox News Digital)

    Attendee Taylor Crosby told Fox News Digital that he decided to come to the vigil because the “recent attack on free speech is something that should motivate the entire country to come together because when we can’t speak our mind, that’s the death of democracy at that point. So, something needs to change and I want to be the change that we want to see in the world.”

    Although he didn’t agree with Kirk on everything, Crosby said he respected his opinions and that he fought for what he believed in.

    Crosby said he didn’t know the Robinson family but had heard he was involved in a socialist community in the area.

    UTAH STUDENTS LIFT VOICES IN PRAYER AT VIGIL FOR CHARLIE KIRK’S CHRISTIAN LEGACY: ‘FELT CALLED BY GOD’

    Charlie Kirk on Utah Valley University campus

    Charlie Kirk speaks at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10, 2025 in Orem, Utah, prior to the assassination. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune/Getty Images)

    “And I’ve had friends that are part of that group, and a lot of them are just filled with hate and vitriol,” he said. “I’ve gotten blocked and removed as friends for having opinions as basic as having a border and not letting in unlimited numbers of migrants. So, there’s definitely a wide extreme of people in this area. Anywhere from people who will come to support free speech to people who will demonize you for having an opinion that 50% of the population believes in. So it’s tough.”

    Jesse Wilkinson stood quietly in the crowd wearing a shirt emblazoned with the word “Freedom.” 

    For Wilkinson, a part-time firefighter from St. George who now lives in Washington, Utah, showing up was about more than politics.

    “I just wanted to support my community,” he said. “I know we’re going through a hard time with the alleged shooter being from here and everything. I grew up in St. George… I just wanted to be supportive and share my love and support for all those that are mourning, especially the Kirk family as well as the Robinson family. I know they’re going through a really hard time.”

    Wilkinson said he became a firefighter out of a desire to serve, and Kirk’s death struck him deeply.

    VIGILS HELD ACROSS US AFTER ASSASSINATION OF CHARLIE KIRK: ‘WE MUST HEAL’

    Charlie Kirk with family on Christmas, him and wife Erika smiling at each other, holding two kids

    Charile Kirk and his wife, Erika Lane Frantzve and their two children at Christmas in December 2024. (Charlie Kirk via Facebook)

    “I think he was an amazing, amazing man. He was having an amazing impact. I admire the man, and I know his voice will echo forever.”

    He also framed the tragedy as an attack not just on Kirk but on the freedoms he stood for.

    “If we’re silent, that’s what’s going to cause violence. We need to come together, we need to talk, and agree to disagree,” he said, echoing Kirk’s words about open debate.

    Even his shirt carried meaning. The “freedom” design, a gift from his mother, was a subtle nod to Kirk’s style and the values he represented.

    “We’re the greatest country on the face of the planet, and we have amazing freedoms,” Wilkinson said.

    For him, the vigil was about honoring Kirk, standing with neighbors, and recommitting to the principles of dialogue and freedom.

    Kevin Holyoak shared a similar message. He told Fox News Digital the evening was a time for reflection, adding that the country is going through tough times and urging people to respect differing beliefs.

    CHARLIE KIRK SHOOTING LEADS TO OUTPOURING FROM UTAH OFFICIALS, 2025 NOMS ON BOTH SIDES

    Charlie Kirk Vigil Washington City, Utah

    Attendees listen as speakers call for unity during a vigil in Washington City, Utah, on Sept. 14, 2025. (Fox News Digital)

    “It’s better to talk through things as opposed to taking measures into your own hands that harm somebody else,” he said, noting that violence runs against the values America was built on.

    A fan of Kirk, Holyoak described him as “an inspiring young person that got it real early.” He admired how Kirk listened to opposing opinions, treated people with respect, and encouraged open conversation.

    “I just think we all need to act that way,” he said.

    For him, the vigil was about honoring Kirk’s legacy while urging the community – and the country – to return to dialogue over conflict.

    Utah Tech University President Shane Smeed told mourners the vigil was a moment for unity and healing. Speaking personally and not in his official role, Smeed called the past week “an incredibly difficult, tragic week” and urged the community to lean on faith instead of fear.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    He reflected on the meaning of unity, describing it as harmony and oneness, and used the image of Canadian geese flying in formation to illustrate how individuals support one another — and what happens when one falls behind. True unity, he said, means ensuring no one is left alone. “To be peacemakers, we have to strive to remove contention and hate in our lives,” Smeed said.

    He closed with a prayer for peace, reminding the community that healing would come only through choosing dialogue, compassion, and unity.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • West Hollywood defends half-staff Pride and trans flags for Charlie Kirk

    [ad_1]

    West Hollywood has responded to criticism for flying the Progress Pride flag and transgender flag at half-staff in response to the killing of Charlie Kirk.

    The California city, known for its sizable LGBTQ+ population, released a statement Sunday saying that lowering its flags was not an endorsement of the late anti-LGBTQ+ activist, who was assassinated Wednesday at a Utah university, but rather an act of policy that follows the directives of presidential proclamations.

    “The City’s action should not be interpreted as an expression of alignment with, or endorsement of, Mr. Kirk’s political views or actions. Rather, the action was undertaken in accordance with the City’s Policy for Recognitions and Memorials, which acknowledges that the City follows the direction of the President in determining when flags in the City are flown at half-staff,” read the statement, according to WeHo Times, a local outlet.

    In its statement, the city added that it would revisit this flag policy “in the coming weeks” in order “to ensure that it appropriately reflects the values of the West Hollywood community.”

    Kirk had a long history of using his platform as a right-wing influencer to attack the LGBTQ+ community, particularly transgender people. And the city’s move to lower Pride flags in its Matthew Shepard Square sparked sizable backlash when the WeHo Times posted a video of the flags to its Instagram account Saturday.

    “This is wild!! I’m all for empathy but this is just ridiculous,” wrote transgender performer Laganja Estranja. “He hated us, raise our flags back up!!” Added Willam, “Why are we as a people in WeHo listening to Trump?” The RuPaul’s Drag Race alumni made headlines last weekend advocating for transgender people at the VMAs in a performance by Sabrina Carpenter.

    A sign left near the flags Sunday read, “Shame on West Hollywood for lowering our flags in honor of a racist, transphobic, homophobic, Nazi-loving monster.”

    President Trump issued a proclamation Wednesday that ordered flag-lowering on “all public buildings and grounds, at all military posts and naval stations, and on all naval vessels of the Federal Government in the District of Columbia and throughout the United States and its territories and possessions until sunset, September 14, 2025.”

    Notably, the states of New York and New Jersey did not follow the flag directive, drawing the ire of conservative critics.

    The act of publicly mourning the late Trump confidant and founder of Turning Point USA, a key group for conservative youth outreach, has emerged as a political litmus test. Broadway star Kristin Chenoweth drew much queer criticism for commenting on Instagram that she “didn’t always agree but appreciated some perspectives” of Kirk and that he must now be in “heaven.” And Stephen King was pressured to apologize for noting on X that Kirk advocating for stoning gay people — even though Kirk indeed stated that stoning gays was “‘God’s perfect law.”

    This article originally appeared on Out: West Hollywood defends half-staff Pride and trans flags for Charlie Kirk

    RELATED

    [ad_2]

    Source link