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lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
Charlie Kirk, a prominent conservative activist and Trump ally, dies | |
after shooting at Utah campus event | |
By Eric Bradner, CNN | |
Updated: | |
7:00 PM EDT, Wed September 10, 2025 | |
Source: CNN | |
Charlie Kirk, a conservative political activist and co-founder of | |
Turning Point USA, has died after at an event at Utah Valley | |
University, President Donald Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. | |
He was 31. | |
As Trump remade the Republican Party, Kirk embodied the party’s | |
newfound populist conservatism in the social media age. Trump has | |
credited Kirk with galvanizing and mobilizing the youth vote for him. | |
“No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States | |
of America better than Charlie,” the president wrote. “He was loved | |
and admired by ALL, especially me, and now, he is no longer with us.” | |
Kirk’s sudden death Wednesday sent shockwaves across the political | |
spectrum, with Republicans and Democrats calling for an end to | |
political violence at a time of heightened concern about deadly attacks | |
and the targeting of public officials. | |
Last year, a gunman Trump at a Pennsylvania rally. In April, a man was | |
arrested in connection with as Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family slept | |
inside. In June, a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband in their | |
home. | |
Kirk, himself a college dropout, was influential with college students | |
and young voters — not only in helping to elect Trump to the | |
presidency but also to inspire a new movement of conservative | |
activists. His involvement began in the wake of the tea party movement | |
and grew with Trump’s ascendance. | |
Having co-founded Turning Point in 2012 at the age of 18, Kirk was a | |
prominent supporter of Trump who courted young voters and used his | |
network of nonprofits to seek to turn out voters on campuses and | |
churches for Trump in 2024. | |
Kirk frequently traveled to college campuses, speaking and taking | |
questions from audience members in exchanges that often led to viral | |
videos. Kirk’s appearance at Utah Valley University on Wednesday was | |
the first of a 14-city fall “American Comeback Tour.” He was about | |
mass shootings when gunfire rang out. | |
Among those in attendance was former US Rep. Jason Chaffetz, a Utah | |
Republican. He said on Fox News he was at the event with his wife, | |
daughter and son-in-law. He said Kirk “came out, he was throwing | |
hats, riling up the crowd.” | |
“I was watching Charlie. I can’t say that I saw blood. I can’t | |
say that I saw him get hit, but I did see him fall immediately | |
backwards into his left,” he said. | |
The American Comeback Tour had Kirk’s signature “Prove Me Wrong | |
Table,” where he would urge those who disagreed with him to debate an | |
issue. | |
Kirk traveled with a private security contingent, a Turning Point USA | |
aide traveling on the tour told CNN, whether he was speaking to large | |
rallies like the one in Orem, Utah, or at smaller events. | |
The president and dozens of other Kirk allies – as well as Democrats | |
who had sharp disagreements with him – posted calls for prayer online | |
in the wake of the shooting. | |
Kirk most recently appeared in the Oval Office in May, attending the | |
swearing-in ceremony of Judge Jeanine Pirro as US attorney for | |
Washington, DC. | |
Kirk argued Trump was saving the American dream | |
Kirk was known for debating college students about abortion rights, | |
which he opposed; climate change, which he downplayed; and transgender | |
rights, which he rejected. He frequently sought to rally young people | |
around traditional gender roles. He also backed Trump’s mass | |
deportation efforts. | |
Kirk spoke at the last three Republican conventions. In 2024, he said | |
that marriage and home ownership were elusive for too many young | |
Americans, and faulted former President Joe Biden. | |
“Under Biden, our young people own nothing and they are miserable. | |
Donald Trump refuses to accept this fake, pathetic, mutilated version | |
of the American dream,” he said. “Donald Trump is on a rescue | |
mission to revive your birthright, one your grandparents and those | |
before them gave everything to hand down to you.” | |
Kirk was an outspoken advocate for gun rights. | |
At an April 2023 Turning Point USA Faith event, he said that “you | |
will never live in a society when you have an armed citizenry and you | |
won’t have a single gun death.” | |
But, Kirk added, “I think it’s worth it. I think it’s worth 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. That is a prudent deal. It is rational.” | |
Having once advocated for the separation of church and state, Kirk | |
embraced more religious themes in recent years and often spoke about | |
politics in apocalyptic terms. | |
At the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2020, he praised | |
Trump for understanding “the seven mountains of cultural influence” | |
— a reference to a Christian nationalist movement that calls on | |
believers to exert influence in government, media, education, business, | |
arts and entertainment, family and religion. | |
On the campaign trail with Trump in Georgia last year, Kirk referred to | |
the contest against then-Vice President Kamala Harris as “a spiritual | |
battle” and said the election was “civilizational defining.” | |
“These next 12 days will define the future of our republic,” he | |
said in the late October rally. “The forces of darkness have tried | |
everything they possibly can.” | |
He started in politics as a teenager | |
Kirk got his first experience in politics as a student at Wheeling High | |
School in the northwest suburbs of Chicago, when he volunteered for the | |
winning 2010 Senate campaign of Republican former Sen. Mark Kirk. | |
He earned national attention in 2012 when, as a high school senior, he | |
wrote in Breitbart News that high school students were being | |
indoctrinated by liberal textbooks. He briefly attended Harper College, | |
but dropped out to become a full-time conservative activist, and went | |
on to argue that college is unnecessary for many people. | |
Kirk and retired businessman and conservative activist Bill Montgomery | |
co-founded Turning Point USA in 2012. The two had met when Kirk was 18, | |
at a speaking engagement at Benedictine University that followed his | |
Breitbart piece. The organization was quickly backed by a roster of | |
major Republican donors, including Foster Friess. | |
He went on to become a best-selling author and well-known media | |
personality who hosted a daily three-hour show. | |
In 2021, Kirk married Erika Frantzve, with whom he shared two young | |
children. | |
People who knew Kirk described him as an intense thinker with an | |
analytic mind. | |
He was seen as understanding the pulse of the young conservative | |
movement and the “Make America Great Again” base. He had a direct | |
line to Trump and could count on the president valuing his opinion even | |
if they disagreed. | |
Republicans had floated the idea of Kirk eventually running for office | |
in Arizona, which his group worked to flip back to Trump’s column | |
last year. | |
He reveled in debating people with whom he disagreed – with video of | |
his fights with liberals often being shared by both sides in the | |
argument – and believed he could change minds through conversation, | |
something his allies and fans noted Wednesday. | |
“If you actually watch Charlie’s events — as opposed to the fake | |
summaries — they are one of the few places with open and honest | |
dialogue between left and right,” Vice President JD Vance wrote on X. | |
This story has been updated with additional details. | |
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