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Tag: Turning Point Action

  • Here’s the surprising list of who will fill in on Charlie Kirk’s ‘American Comeback Tour’ at Utah State

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    Turning Point USA has announced who will take the place of slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk for an upcoming Utah State University event.

    Also, the group says it will no longer hold public events outdoors, according to Turning Point Action COO Tyler Bowyer.

    The “American Comeback Tour” is coming to USU on Sept. 30. It will be held indoors, and will be focused on where Utah should go from here and what healing from Kirk’s death looks like.

    A panel of speakers will take part in Kirk’s place, including Utah Sen. Mike Lee, Gov. Spencer Cox, Arizona Rep. Andy Biggs, and former Utah Rep. Jason Chaffetz, Bowyer told the Deseret News on Monday.

    Changes and consistencies in the debates moving forward

    Tyler Bowyer, Turning Point Action chief operating officer, answers interview questions in his office at Turning Point headquarters in Phoenix, Ariz., on Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2025. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

    Debate will still happen at TPUSA campus events.

    “This is who we are. This is the DNA of Turning Point,” Bowyer told the Deseret News. “You can’t have Turning Point and walk away from the things that made us successful.”

    Coupled with elevated security measures, Turning Point is “completely committed to continuing the program,” Bowyer said.

    He said the organization still has a goal of promoting civil discourse.

    “That’s part of the mission, and goal of doing these things is that if you do them and you do it civilly, you win people over. … That’s what Charlie had been doing. That’s his life’s work, and that’s a beautiful thing,” he said.

    Many people have reached out and said they would be willing to step in and help fill Kirk’s role on the tour stops, he said.

    Kirk’s death is stirring an ‘American revival’

    On Sunday, TPUSA hosted Kirk’s funeral at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, bringing in an estimated 200,000 people to honor his life.

    Kirk’s wife Erika Kirk, President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, members of his Cabinet, Tucker Carlson and others spoke about God, forgiveness and faith.

    “I don’t think we realized the yearning for spirituality that existed within the greater political atmosphere,” Bowyer said.

    Erika Kirk is the new face of TPUSA

    Erika Kirk was named the CEO and board chair of Turning Point USA on Sept. 18.

    “Erika is is the face. She is the CEO. She’s one with Charlie,” Bowyer said. “We want to be respectful of her and what she wants to do.”

    Two days after her husband’s assassination, Erika spoke in a video filmed at Kirk’s recording studio, thanking the people who have supported her as she grieves. Again during his funeral, Sunday, Erika took the podium, and vowed to continue Kirk’s mission and said she’s forgiven her husband’s killer.

    “She’s so loved and so respected and after after yesterday in particular, I think there’s millions of Americans who have her back,” Bowyer said.

    The big names filling in for Kirk on other tour stops

    Three of the eleven stops on Kirk’s “America Comeback Tour” are yet to be filled. The other seven will be covered by the following politicians and political commentators:

    • Michael Knowles at the University of Minnesota – Twin Cities on Sept. 22.

    • Megyn Kelly and Gov. Glenn Youngkin at Virginia Tech on Sept. 24.

    • Vivek Ramaswamy and Gov. Greg Gianforte at Montana State on Oct. 7.

    • Glenn Beck at the University of North Dakota on Oct. 9.

    • Tucker Carlson at Indiana University Bloomington on Oct. 21.

    • Allie Beth Stuckey and Gov. Jeff Landry at Louisiana State University on Oct. 27.

    • Rob Schneider and Frank Turek at UC Berkely on Nov. 10.

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  • We need calm, compelling voices from the middle

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    The late Charlie Kirk, podcaster and founder of Turning Point USA, speaks at the opening of the Turning Point Action conference on July 15, 2023 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    I got a surprise phone call last week from the other side of the world, where an American expatriate was worried about the future of his country in the wake of the Charlie Kirk assassination. We agreed that the dis-United States of America needs calming voices who can command attention — a tall order in a media landscape that is dominated by sources that are provocative, inflammatory and often false. All of us need to help change that.

    American public discourse is now driven by opinion, not by facts, largely because of social-media platforms that favor opinion and use secret algorithms that promote the most provocative views to compete in the new “attention economy.” The decline of the traditional news business reflects the reality that the market for fact has shrunk while the market for opinion has grown. Americans prefer to be entertained, and have their views confirmed, than be informed — especially by facts that might conflict with those views.

    So, what can we agree on? I would like to think that virtually all Americans agree that political violence is never justified, and that the vast majority of us would probably say likewise about speech that advocates political violence. There are laws against such things.

    What, then, about speech that celebrates political violence, even a crime that results in death? That sort of speech, however repugnant, has been protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution. But now people are getting fired for callous things they said about Charlie Kirk’s death, and President Trump and his top lieutenants are using the assassination to more deeply demonize and outright threaten their political opponents.

    “Mourn him respectfully or suffer the consequences,” as the Reuters news service described the approach. Ironically, Kirk, who had plenty of controversial views, was lauded most as a champion of free speech; now his friends and allies are using his death to suppress speech — and maybe more.

    “There is no civility in the celebration of political assassination,” Vice President JD Vance said Monday, alleging “leftist” funding of “terrorist sympathizers” and urging his audience to call employers of those who’ve made comments they find objectionable.

    Trump said without evidence, “We have some pretty radical groups and they got away with murder.” Lexington businessman Nate Morris, who began his Senate campaign with a Kirk-hosted rally and wants Trump’s endorsement, was on the same page, telling Breitbart News that the “radical left has blood on their hands.”

    Trump’s deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, said the government will use its power to take liberal groups’ money and power “and, if you’ve broken the law, to take away your freedom.” Miller recently said that the Democratic Party is not a political party but “a domestic extremist organization . . . exclusively dedicated to protecting terrorists, criminals, gang-bangers and murderers.” 

    Utah Gov. Gov. Spencer Cox, Sept. 10, 2025. (Photo by Spenser Heaps for Utah News Dispatch)

    That’s ridiculous, but it sets the stage for the government to go after the opposing party, and that’s the sort of thing my expatriate friend and I worry about. Trump clearly revels in the exercise of power, and has indicated no interest in using the power of his office to cool the conversation, as Utah Gov. Spencer Cox tried to do. But some Republicans wish Trump would.

    On KET’s “Kentucky Tonight” Monday night, Kentucky Republican strategist Amy Wickliffe said political leaders, from the White House on down, need to call for “taking the rhetoric down.” She acknowledged that’s “really hard” to do with “people in your sphere,” but “Where we go from here, it’s on us. It’s on all of us.”

    The maxim, “All that is necessary for evil to prevail is for good men and women to do nothing,” is not as operative as it was in the old media environment, when extreme voices had little access to mass audiences. Now, the extremes are amplified in huge echo chambers, and many Americans in the middle have dropped out of the toxic talk. The fact that flags went to half-staff for the death of a political activist who was unknown to many if not most Americans shows how our political tribes live in different realities.

    Perhaps the best place for good women and men to do something about the current crisis is not on social media, but face to face, one on one and in small groups — where there is at least a modicum of trust and respect.

    Cox, the Utah governor, said we should “log off, turn off, touch grass, hug a family member, go out and do good in your community.” At a local philanthropic event in my hometown of Albany last weekend, I told a friend that everyone has a civic responsibility to improve the community where they live. Now, technology has made us part of a national community that needs improving, and we all have a role to play.

    This column is republished from the Northern Kentucky Tribune, a nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism.

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