Disciplinary actions for commentary on the
Charlie Kirk assassination
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disciplinary_actions_for_commentary_on_the_Charlie_Kirk_assassination
After the assassination of American political
activist and commentator Charlie Kirk in September 2025, there followed mass
disciplinary and retaliatory actions against people for commentary or social
media posts celebrating, justifying, or trivializing Kirk's death, encourage
further political violence, denigrate Kirk, or tarnish his legacy. These
efforts were promoted and directly engaged in by the U.S. federal government,
with President Donald Trump explicitly condemning the left for the violence in
his address to the nation in its immediate aftermath, and pledging to target
left-wing groups and causes, monitor political speech, revoke visas, and
designate far-left groups as domestic terrorists in response to the attack.
On the night of Kirk's killing, the Department of
State announced it would penalize individuals considered to be "praising,
rationalizing, or making light of Kirk's death". Secretary of Defense Pete
Hegseth announced an investigation into the reactions of members of the U.S.
Armed Forces, as well as subsequent firings and dismissals of those found to
have made obscene or blasphemous comments about Kirk. Commentary cited as
reasons for firings and other reprisals included comments which openly celebrated
Kirk's demise, spoke critically of his politics or political influence, or
which appeared to justify Kirk's assassination through citing his own views on
the constant of gun violence or otherwise reposting Kirk's words in ways
intended to dishonor his memory. In some cases, criticizing the Republican
Party's response to his killing—regarded by some as seeking to
opportunistically capitalize on Kirk's death to target political enemies and
engage in a broad crackdown on dissent against the Trump administration—resulted
in termination of employment or other disciplinary actions.
Following Kirk's death, a number of prominent
conservatives called for retaliation or punishment of private citizens and
government or military employees whose comments about Kirk were, in their view,
likely to encourage additional political violence, or which were deemed
insufficiently respectful towards Kirk and his legacy. They also called for
investigations into left-wing groups, universities, and the military for
putative anti-Kirk speech. On The Charlie Kirk Show following his death, Vice
President JD Vance called for people heard to make remarks deemed uncivil to
Kirk to be reported to their employers for termination. Trump later announced
that any network that criticized him too harshly could be subject to a
revocation of their broadcast license. Multiple analysts have regarded these
efforts by the political right as a significant crackdown on political speech
and dissent in the United States, and an effort to silence criticism of Kirk
and the political ideology he promoted. The response was criticized as a form
of cancel culture, government censorship, and of bearing similarities to
McCarthyism.
After the
shooting, some users on Bluesky and TikTok made posts glorifying or celebrating
Kirk's killing—which, in extreme cases, incited further violence against other
right-wing figures, several posting or reposting a meme that said "do
Trump next" or "Elon next please". This prompted the
platform[which?] to issue a statement denouncing such posts. Other social media
platforms including Meta, YouTube, and Reddit issued similar warnings to their
users.[8]
Although
President Donald Trump said in September 2025 that "the radicals on the
left are the problem" with political violence,[9] cumulatively over
decades, most extremist killings in the U.S. have been caused by right-wing
perpetrators.[10][a] From 2022 through 2024, all 61 political killings were
committed by right-wing extremists.[11]
Over
decades, right-wing ideologically motivated homicides have substantially
outnumbered those perpetrated by left wing perpetrators in the U.S.[b]
Far-right motivated homicides (not shown in chart) have also occurred much more
frequently than jihadi violence inspired by Islamic extremism.[b]
Speaking
to the nation during the aftermath of Kirk's death, President Donald Trump,
while calling for nonviolence and lamenting "the demonization of those
with whom we disagree", blamed "a radical left group of
lunatics" for the killing; Trump said that leftist political rhetoric and
activism was terrorism and hate speech responsible for Kirk's death, and stated
that he would "get that problem solved".[12][13][14] He subsequently
announced that people and groups "on the left" would be investigated
for alleged responsibility for political violence and would face retaliatory
action.[15]
In an
interview, Trump reiterated his intent to crack down on speech and activism by
left-wing and progressive groups, calling for prominent Democratic Party donor
George Soros to be jailed, accusing Soros as well as other left-wing political
figures and organizations of effectively funding Kirk's murder via support for
"violent protest".[12] The groups Trump had explicitly accused of
funding and fomenting violence, such as the Open Society Foundation and
Indivisible, condemned the killing prior to Trump's remarks and denied ever
supporting or funding violent protest.[12][16] After Jimmy Kimmel's show was
indefinitely suspended a few days later when Kimmel opined on air that
"the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered
Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can
to score political points from it", Trump stated that broadcasters who
criticized him too strongly could risk being subject to loss of
licensure.[17][18][19]
Hosting
Kirk's podcast after his death, JD Vance called for the dismantling of
progressive political organizations, including Soros's, and told Americans to
report "uncivil" speech about Kirk to employers and relevant
authorities, demanding that individuals who engaged in inappropriate speech
about Kirk be terminated.[20][21] Thousands were flagged by vigilante online
conservative groups for allegedly celebrating Kirk's death, often incorrectly
and without evidence.[22] Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that any
non-citizens who celebrated Kirk's death would be immediately deported,[23][24]
and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth instructed staff to identify and purge
any members of the military service or his department who condoned or mocked
Kirk's death.[25]
Deputy
Chief of Staff Stephen Miller immediately blamed the left for Kirk's murder,
writing that left-wing ideology was a "twisted, depraved ... ideology at
war with family and nature ... that leads, always, inevitably and willfully, to
violence",[26] and accused the left of "celebrating".[27] Miller
later claimed on Kirk's podcast with Vance that, on the day before his death,
"the last message that Charlie sent me ... was that we needed to have an
organized strategy to go after the left-leaning organizations that are
promoting violence in this country."[27] Miller alleged that "a vast
terrorist network" on the left was responsible for the murder, and
declared that the administration would "destroy" progressive
political organizations in response, in Kirk's name.[28] Miller said the
federal government would devote every resource at its disposal to vengeance
against left-wing non-profit and political non-governmental organizations and
networks and would "identify, disrupt, dismantle and destroy these
networks."[29]
Subsequently,
far-right activists such as Laura Loomer sought to identify social media users
who were posting offensive or celebratory content about Kirk's death.[30]
Reuters reported that some right-wing influencers who encouraged reporting
social media posts had previously mocked political violence; Reuters cited
comments from a number of right-wing activists, including Kirk, about past
events including the attack on Paul Pelosi.[31] On September 11, in response to
the previous day's "horrific assassination", Deputy Secretary of
State Christopher Landau invited his social-media followers to report any
foreign-born U.S. residents who "glorify violence and hatred" to the
Department of State in order to protect the American people.[32][33] On
September 15, Vance guest hosted Kirk's podcast and told listeners that if they
saw anyone who was reportedly celebrating Kirk's death to "call them
out" and continued stating: "Hell, call their employer. We don't
believe in political violence, but we do believe in civility, and there is no
civility in the celebration of political assassination."[34] The
Associated Press described the campaign as having "broadened to include
even those whose statements were critical of Kirk without celebrating his
assassination". Adam Goldstein of the Foundation for Individual Rights and
Expression described the shift as a form of right-wing cancel culture, noting
that people were being targeted for simply quoting Kirk or failing to mourn his
passing adequately. Goldstein said that "government involvement in this
does inch this closer to looking like McCarthyism".[35]
A
centralized list of people's identities and personal information were gathered
online at a website called Charlie's Murderers, which was registered shortly
after his death. The information listed included full names, employment
details, locations, social media handles, and email addresses of the targeted
individuals, while the administrators of the site have remained anonymous. The
site reportedly received thousands of submitted names to be added to the
list.[36] The website was later rebranded as the Charlie Kirk Data Foundation,
before it was taken down on September 16.[34] Vance and Republican members of
Congress have called for the government to start investigating progressive
organizations following Kirk's assassination, and those targeted have compared
the firings to those of the Second Red Scare and McCarthyism in the 1950s, when
suspected communists were targeted and ostracized from American society.[37]
Due to
many unverified accusations being made, public information about uninvolved
individuals with similar names were posted on social media by accusers. A
Walmart IT technician with the same name of an accused poster had his public
information posted online which resulted in threatening messages, phone calls,
a job suspension and his family having to flee their home out of safety
concerns. In another case, the Students for Trump national chair Ryan Fournier
had to take back an accusation of comments deemed anti-Kirk against an
elementary school teacher in Wisconsin, resulting in Fournier asking for the
doxing and accusations to continue just with more evidence and details.[38]
Many
right-wing media figures and former members of the administration, such as Alex
Jones, Jesse Waters, Elon Musk, and Steve Bannon,[39][40] stated that Kirk's
killing meant that Americans were "in a war" between right and
left.[41][42] Others on the right, including conservatives who had derided the
practice as cancel culture,[43] demanded "retribution" and
"vengeance" against the left for speech claimed to have contributed
to and celebrated Kirk's death, endorsing speech crackdowns, and
retaliation.[44][45][46] Musk claimed that "the left is the party of
murder" and repeatedly exhorted his followers to "fight"; Musk
also sought personally to have individuals deplatformed, imprisoned, or
retaliated against for negative commentary about Kirk despite his claim to be a
"free speech absolutist" who acquired Twitter to oppose efforts to
deplatform individuals in retaliation for unpopular speech,[43] attempting to
publicly exert pressure via the social network on Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella
to retaliate against employees of its affiliate Blizzard whom Musk alleged had
made inappropriate comments about Kirk, and similarly seeking to influence
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to retaliate against leftist Twitch streamer Hasan Piker
for making comments about the shooting with which Musk apparently
disagreed.[47][48][49] The allegations that Piker or Blizzard employees had
celebrated Kirk's death have not been subsequently verified.[50]
Attorney
General Pam Bondi indicated on Katie Miller's podcast and in subsequent
Department of Justice announcements that she intended to "target"
speech against Kirk following his death as hate speech, which led to a backlash
within a section of the right.[51][52] Some right-wing officials and members of
the media such as Brendan Carr or Tucker Carlson opposed some of the efforts to
limit free speech or criticism in the wake of Kirk's death, particularly
efforts to classify speech as hate speech which celebrates Kirk's death or
punish free expression online, viewing these as unconstitutional and
potentially dangerous crackdown on civil liberties or basic freedoms.[53][54]
The New York Times described the campaign as morphing into "a conservative
version of the cancel culture that only a few years ago was wielded by the
American left",[55] and evidence of the rise of a "woke
right".[56]
Reactions
In The New York Times, Adam B. Kushner reported
the firings as part of a crackdown on free speech in the United States and
investigative journalist Kenneth P. Vogel discussed "the emerging White
House plan to use the federal government to crack down on the left-wing groups
that it believes inspire political violence".[132][133] An Axios article
describes the firings as companies "reacting to pressure from Republican
officials and right-wing activists and quickly firing anyone who attempts to
justify or minimize the assassination of Charlie Kirk — or even criticize the
slain conservative activist."[134] Axios says these firings
"demonstrate fast-changing norms around free speech that many find
troubling", indicating that employers are more closely monitoring their
employees' social media posts.[134]
A Telegraph Online article echoes these
criticisms, saying that while criticism of Kirk is not formally illegal,
"what has emerged is a de facto enforcement system, carried out through
corporate policies, viral tip-offs, and political pressure", also citing
the chilling effect.[135] The article suggests that this is less about stopping
violence than about policing speech, and goes on to say: "If meaningful
free expression is to endure, society must scrutinize these cases, question who
is punished and why, and revisit what protections workers really have.
Otherwise, public discourse around volatile figures will become a minefield,
where even legitimate criticism carries the risk of career
destruction."[135]
Conservative podcaster and former Fox News host
Tucker Carlson spoke out against the firings on The Tucker Carlson Show,
stating that the Trump administration was using Kirk's death to trample on the
First Amendment. He warned that if Kirk's death is used as leverage to bring
hate speech laws into the United States, it would cause havoc and be a
justified moment for civil disobedience.[136] During Trump's state visit to the
United Kingdom, an article from The Independent touched on the hypocrisy and
double standards of Trump and his administration pushing for and celebrating
the firing and targeting of those that they felt were celebrating Kirk's death,
while Trump spoke about the virtues of free speech and praised it during his
speech at Windsor Castle during a state dinner.[137]
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