Right-Wing
Activists Urge Followers to Expose Those Celebrating Kirk Killing
The
widespread and fast-moving campaign has already resulted in lost jobs,
suspensions and internal investigations, heightening tensions online between
supporters and detractors of Charlie Kirk.
Alan
Feuer Ken
Bensinger Pooja Salhotra
By Alan
FeuerKen Bensinger and Pooja Salhotra
Sept. 12,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/12/us/politics/charlie-kirk-shooting-firings-celebration.html
In the
wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, right-wing influencers and at least one
Trump administration official have actively encouraged people to scour the
internet for remarks celebrating the killing and to expose those who have
posted them online.
The
widespread and fast-moving campaign of naming-and-shaming has already resulted
in countless lost jobs, professional suspensions and internal investigations,
exacerbating the already fraught tensions over the shooting that exist online.
The
killing of Mr. Kirk, a hugely popular activist closely aligned with President
Trump, was immediately met on the right by a tidal wave of grief-stricken rage
on Wednesday afternoon — one that quickly turned into a thirst for vengeance.
Several online social media personalities, some with enormous followings,
called almost in unison for “war” to be waged against those on the left they
perceive to be their enemies.
Among
those personalities have been far-right agitators like Laura Loomer and Chaya
Raichik, who runs a large account on X called Libs of TikTok. Since the
shooting, they and dozens of other online influencers have taken it upon
themselves to recruit ordinary Americans to turn in fellow citizens for making
comments about Mr. Kirk that may be nasty or disparaging, but are likely
protected by the First Amendment.
But while
the exposures may occur online, there have been consequences in the real world.
A Secret
Service employee was placed on administrative leave after stating on Facebook
that Mr. Kirk had “spewed hate and racism on his show,” said the agency’s
spokesman, Anthony Guglielmi. The leaders of the Education Departments in
Florida and Oklahoma both issued statements threatening to investigate and
punish teachers who made any positive comments about the assassination, and
some teachers in Texas and Iowa were either fired or placed on leave.
After
Michael Mann, a prominent climate scientist who works at the University of
Pennsylvania, reposted a message referring to Mr. Kirk as the “head of Trump’s
Hitler Youth,” Dave McCormick, the state’s Republican senator, called it
“despicable” and urged the university to “take immediate, decisive action.”
“It is
very disappointing that Senator McCormick has misportrayed me in this way, let
alone made such inflammatory demands,” Mr. Mann wrote in an email. He said he
had deleted the post and had publicly disavowed the negative comments about Mr.
Kirk, which he had initially overlooked. “I was not criticizing Charlie Kirk,”
Mr. Mann added. “I was criticizing those who were lionizing him as a paragon of
free speech and good-faith discourse.”
Rose
Pugliese, a Colorado state lawmaker who is a Republican, asked Gov. Jared
Polis, a Democrat, on Thursday to fire a state employee who had accused Mr.
Kirk online of being “a white man who spews horrid” words “against every
marginalized community.”
Representative
Clay Higgins, Republican of Louisiana, said that he planned to use
“Congressional authority” to force tech companies to “ban for life” any person
who “belittled the assassination of Charlie Kirk.” And John C. Phelan, the
secretary of the Navy, posted a message saying that sailors or Marines found to
be “displaying contempt toward a fellow American who was assassinated” would be
“dealt with swiftly and decisively.”
Tim
Weninger, a professor at the University of Notre Dame who studies the ways
social media is used to dehumanize people and incite violence, described the
targeting campaign as a new front in online rhetoric.
“I
haven’t seen something like this on social media in America, really ever — it’s
a unique moment,” he said.
He
characterized the purge as a kind of backlash to the escalating violent
rhetoric online over the past several years.
“What we
are seeing is that people say it’s enough of this, it has to stop,” Mr.
Weninger said. “And if you lose your job because of comments you made
celebrating the killing, that’s a consequence of your speech.”
The
attention brought to those attacking Mr. Kirk has come not only from big social
media accounts, but also from dozens of smaller ones that have joined in the
effort with a kind of gleeful energy.
One
clearinghouse for the campaign, parts of which were earlier reported by Wired,
is a website that appears to have been registered just three hours after Mr.
Kirk was killed. The site includes a tip line for submissions and includes
photos of the people who disparaged him or cheered his death, along with
personal information like their email addresses, place of residence and
employer.
As of
Friday afternoon, 41 people had been named on the site. Its anonymous creator
posted that the site had received almost 20,000 submissions and said the names
would be put in a searchable public
database of “radical activists calling for violence,” while also denying that
it was “a doxxing website.”
“This
website is a lawful data aggregator of publicly available information,” the
note read. “It has been created for the purposes of public education. We seek
to collect and archive instances of individuals promoting or glorifying of
political violence.”
Christopher
Landau, the deputy secretary of state, issued a separate call on Thursday
morning, asking his more than 200,000 followers on X to reach out to him with
information about “foreigners who glorify violence and hatred.”
“I have
been disgusted to see some on social media praising, rationalizing, or making
light of the event, and have directed our consular officials to undertake
appropriate action,” Mr. Landau wrote, referring to Mr. Kirk’s killing. “Please
feel free to bring such comments by foreigners to my attention so that the
@StateDept can protect the American people.”
It
remains unclear whether Mr. Landau or other officials at the State Department
have acted on any of the numerous tips that came in response to his call-out. A
department spokesman said that the administration did not believe that it
“should grant visas to persons whose presence in our country does not align
with U.S. national security interests.”
Left-wing
activists have used similar tactics in the past to draw attention to overtly
racist or anti-gay remarks online, in an effort to bring public censure to the
people posting them. Right-wing activists have pushed back hard against these
efforts, branding them as examples of “cancel culture.”
Teams of
digital sleuths, calling themselves “Sedition Hunters,” also played a large
role in identifying rioters who took part in the attack on the Capitol on Jan.
6, 2021. But the people they focused on generally appeared to be involved in
criminal activity rather than constitutionally protected speech, and the
information they collected was often handed over to the traditional authorities
for further possible use.
In
February, after news outlets identified employees of Elon Musk’s
government-slashing agency, the Department of Governmental Efficiency, Ed
Martin, then serving as the top federal prosecutor in Washington, promised Mr.
Musk in a letter that his office would “pursue any and all legal action against
anyone who impedes your work or threatens your people.”
While it
was hard to determine how much the right-wing campaign had been coordinated in
advance or had emerged from a grass-roots effort, those taking part it in have
been celebrating the results.
“Make
Liberals Homeless Again! Take their jobs,” Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the
Proud Boys who was pardoned for his role in Jan. 6, wrote on X on Thursday.
“Every
leftist you get fired for celebrating someone being murdered, is another
business who has a chance to hire a quality human being to replace them,”
Brenden Dilley, a pro-Trump influencer known for sharing vulgar memes online,
wrote on X on Friday morning. “This is how you take back your community.”
Ms.
Loomer, a self-described free speech absolutist with 1.7 million followers on
X, bragged in a text message to The New York Times that she had outed “dozens”
of people who had celebrated the assassination. “I hope all of them lose their
jobs,” she wrote. “Incitement of violence isn’t free speech.”
Those who
have been targeted for their remarks about Mr. Kirk come from various walks of
life — law firms, the media, military and government service.
Public
schoolteachers in particular have come under fire for their statements, as
school district officials and state leaders in at least eight states have said
that they would investigate one or more teachers for inappropriate comments
about Mr. Kirk. Investigations were announced in Florida, Texas, Oklahoma,
Massachusetts, Virginia, Iowa, Rhode Island and South Carolina.
Anastasios
Kamoutsas, the commissioner of education in Florida, said in a memo to state
superintendents on Thursday that some teachers had made “despicable comments”
about Mr. Kirk’s killing and that he intended to investigate every teacher who
posted vile, inappropriate messages.
“If an
investigation determines that these teachers should not be in a classroom based
on their behavior, the commissioner will use all of his power to hold these
educators responsible up to and including revoking their educator certificate,”
Nathalia Medina, press secretary for the Florida Department of Education, said
in an email.
In
Oklahoma, Superintendent Ryan Walters similarly promised to revoke the
teacher’s license of any instructors who “glorify this disgusting act of
violence.”
At least
one teacher was under investigation, Mr. Walters said. He also encouraged
parents to use an online reporting system to document anything that could
endanger their child’s learning environment.
Eileen
Sullivan and Michael Crowley contributed reporting.
Alan
Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the
criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former
President Donald J. Trump.
Ken
Bensinger covers media and politics for The Times.
Pooja
Salhotra covers breaking news across the United States.


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