Trump
declines to call for unity after Charlie Kirk killing in stunning move
President
tells Fox News ‘the radicals on the left are the problem’ and refuses to seek
common way forward
Ed
Pilkington
Fri 12
Sep 2025 21.12 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/12/trump-fox-friends-charlie-kirk-shooting
Donald
Trump has declined to call for the US to come together as a way of fixing the
country’s divisions in the wake of the assassination of his close associate,
the rightwing activist Charlie Kirk, preferring to cast “vicious and horrible”
radicals on the left of US politics as the sole problem.
In an
interview on Fox & Friends on Friday morning, the US president was asked
what he intended to do to heal the wounds of Kirk’s shooting in Utah. “How do
we fix this country? How do we come back together?” he was asked by the show’s
co-host Ainsley Earhardt, who commented that there were radicals operating on
the left and right of US politics.
Less than
48 hours after Kirk was shot in broad daylight on the campus of Utah Valley
University, Trump replied: “I tell you something that is going to get me in
trouble, but I couldn’t care less.”
He went
on: “The radicals on the right are radical because they don’t want to see crime
… The radicals on the left are the problem – and they are vicious and horrible
and politically savvy. They want men in women’s sports, they want transgender
for everyone, they want open borders. The worst thing that happened to this
country.”
Trump’s
refusal to seek a common bipartisan way forward at a time of profound national
anger, fear and mourning was a stunning move for a sitting US president, even
by his standards.
The US
has a long history of presidents using their rhetorical powers to try to
overcome political fissures. The pinnacle perhaps was Abraham Lincoln’s second
inaugural address towards the end of the civil war, in which he sought to “bind
up the nation’s wounds” and made a point of striving for unity “with malice
toward none, with charity for all”.
In more
recent times, Joe Biden used his inaugural address in 2021, just days after the
insurrection by Trump supporters at the US Capitol on January 6, to call for
unity, without which, he said, “there is no peace, only bitterness and fury”.
Trump’s
appearance on Fox News made clear he has no intention of following that
rhetorical tradition. Instead, the tenor of his response to the Kirk shooting
has been hyper-partisan and grounded in retribution.
In
Friday’s comments, he threatened the philanthropist George Soros with a Rico
investigation of the sort normally reserved for organised crime. He accused
Soros of funding “professional agitators” who were engaging in “more than
protest, this is real agitation, this is riots on the streets”.
In an
Oval Office address delivered hours after Kirk was pronounced dead, Trump made
menacing remarks indicating he would seek revenge against “organizations that
fund and support” political violence. He laid blame for the current plight
entirely on what he called the “radical left”.
The
president has already used his second term in the White House to turn the heat
up on those he regards as his political enemies. He has authorised an
investigation into the main fundraising channel for the Democratic party,
ActBlue, and threatened to rescind the tax-exempt status of progressive groups
such as Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (Crew) and
environmental groups.

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