How Trump
is seizing on Charlie Kirk’s killing for a campaign of vengeance
The Trump
administration is trying to harness outrage over the rightwing activist’s
killing to crush dissent, experts say
David
Smith
David
Smith in Washington
Sat 20
Sep 2025 16.29 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/20/charlie-kirk-funeral-trump-republicans
They will
gather to mourn one of their own. On Sunday the late rightwing activist Charlie
Kirk is set to be hailed by Donald Trump as a martyr of the Make America great
again (Maga) movement.
But
Kirk’s memorial service at a 63,000-seat football stadium in Arizona could,
critics fear, be exploited by the US president to serve a darker purpose:
turning collective grief into a campaign of vengeance against America’s enemy
within.
Trump has
spent the past 10 days escalating threats against what he calls the “radical
left” after the fatal shooting of Kirk, 31, on a university campus in Utah.
The White
House is considering classifying some groups as domestic terrorists and
revoking tax-exempt status for certain non-profits, even though there is no
evidence linking these groups to the killing.
Trump and
his allies have also sought to undermine the legitimacy of the Democratic
party, branding it an extremist organisation despite it having roundly
condemned the attack on Kirk.
Although
officials insist that their focus is preventing violence, critics see an
extension of Trump’s campaign of retribution against his political foes and an
erosion of free speech rights. They warn that, in an echo of authoritarian
governments around the world, his administration is trying to harness outrage
over Kirk’s killing to crush dissent.
“Political
violence is very often used as a pretext to crack down on civil liberties and
on opponents – this is page one of the autocrats’ playbook,” said Steven
Levitsky, a political scientist at Harvard University and co-author of the book
How Democracies Die.
“I’m a
Latin Americanist by training and the language we’ve heard lately reminds me a
lot of the outsized response of military dictators in South America in the
1970s and that was a response to much higher levels of political violence than
we see in the United States.”
Levitsky
added: “One is hard pressed to find an authoritarian government that did not
take advantage of either a terrorist attack or a political assassination – an
episode of political violence – to further crack down on civil liberties. This
is mainstream authoritarian stuff.”
Emotions
are bound to be raw at Sunday’s tribute to Kirk, a close ally of Trump and
personal friend of his son Donald Trump Jr, and a key figure in mobilising
support for the president on university campuses. Authorities said they believe
the suspect, Tyler Robinson, 22, acted alone and they charged him with murder
on Tuesday.
However,
administration officials have repeatedly made sweeping statements about the
need for broader investigations and punishments related to Kirk’s death.
Stephen Miller, a top policy adviser, claimed without evidence that there was
an “organised campaign that led to this assassination”.
Miller’s
comments came during a conversation with JD Vance, who was guest-hosting Kirk’s
talkshow from his ceremonial office in the White House on Monday.
Miller
said he was feeling “focused, righteous anger,” and “we are going to channel
all of the anger” by working to “uproot and dismantle these terrorist networks”
by using “every resource we have.”
The
vice-president blamed “crazies on the far left” for saying the White House
would “go after constitutionally protected speech”. Instead, he said, “We’re
going to go after the NGO network that foments, facilitates and engages in
violence.”
Asked for
examples, the White House pointed to demonstrations where police officers and
federal agents have been injured, as well as the distribution of goggles and
face masks during protests over immigration enforcement in Los Angeles.
The US
attorney general, Pam Bondi, blamed “leftwing radicals” for the shooting and
said “they will be held accountable”. She warned: “We will absolutely target
you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech. And that’s
across the aisle.”
Her
comments sparked a backlash across the political spectrum, since even hate
speech is generally considered to be protected under the first amendment to the
constitution. Bondi tried to clean up her remarks, writing on social media that
they would focus on “hate speech that crosses the line into threats of
violence”.
They are
justifying and leading a state-sponsored cancel culture
Charlie
Sykes
But
Charlie Sykes, a conservative author and broadcaster, said: “What you’re
hearing from Trump, JD Vance, Stephen Miller and Pam Bondi is an unambiguous
intention to use this tragedy as a pretext to crack down on dissent and
criticism.
“This is
almost a classic move from the authoritarian playbook: to use a crisis to
declare an emergency, to identify enemies and then to use that as an excuse to
use state power as a cudgel against political opponents.”
Already
Trump has declared that he is designating the antifa movement a terrorist
organisation while the Heritage Foundation thinktank and the Oversight Project,
the authors of the influential Project 2025 blueprint, released a memo
designating transgender people as “violent extremists”.
Conflating
such so-called threats with the Democratic party would be a leap but it is one
that Miller and company seem willing to make, in what Levitsky regards as
another typical authoritarian manoeuvre. “There’s almost always a rhetorical
slip of the hand in which you link extremists who may be real or imagined or
exaggerated to your mainstream opposition,” he said.
“It’s far
from clear that the guy who perpetrated this assassination belongs to any
far-left movement; it seems pretty clear he did not. It’s very difficult to
imagine that the far left, which in the United States is incredibly weak, poses
a threat.”
He added:
“This is being used - and this is what authoritarians have done in many places
- as a pretext to go after the Democratic party, which uniformly to a person
repudiated this assassination and is in no way linked to it, and to go after
what might be called opposition civil society.”
Jamie
Raskin, a Democratic congressman from Maryland, drew a comparison with the June
killing of Democrat Melissa Hortman, a former speaker of the Minnesota state
house, and her husband. “The Democrats didn’t run around blaming the Republican
party or the conservative philosophy,” he said. “We didn’t engage in a series
of guilt by association tactics.”
Raskin
also reacted to recent comments in which Miller described Democrats as “a
domestic, extremist organisation”. “What is his basis for that? That is out of
an authoritarian how-to guide. Authoritarians like to describe anyone who does
not accept their rule over society as a terrorist. That’s a Putin move; that’s
a Pinochet move.”
Since
taking office Trump has mobilised the federal government to pressure law firms,
universities and other independent institutions. The White House has reportedly
pointed to Indivisible, a progressive grassroots network, and the Open Society
Foundations, founded by George Soros, as further potential subjects of
scrutiny.
More than
a hundred non-profit leaders, representing organisations including the Ford
Foundation, the Omidyar Network and the MacArthur Foundation, released a joint
letter saying “we reject attempts to exploit political violence to
mischaracterize our good work or restrict our fundamental freedoms”.
After
years of railing against censorship and “cancel culture”, Trump and his allies
are now policing their opponents’ speech. People deemed to have celebrated
Kirk’s death have been portrayed as complicit in the surge of political
violence, with dozens fired, suspended or disciplined by employers over
“inappropriate” comments.
This
week, late-night TV host Jimmy Kimmel was suspended by the ABC network over
comments he made about Kirk following pressure from the Trump administration.
Trump suggested regulators should consider revoking licences for networks that
“give me only bad publicity”.
Trump
also brought a $15bn defamation lawsuit against the New York Times and four of
its journalists in what the newspaper described as a meritless attempt to
discourage independent reporting. On Friday a judge tossed out the action but
allowed Trump to refile and amend it within 28 days.
Sykes,
author of How the Right Lost Its Mind, observed: “The irony is that Charlie
Kirk justified much of his rhetoric as free speech and denied that there was
such a thing as hate speech so that all the speech was justifiable. They’re
willing to completely do a 180, completely turn that entire position on its
head by adopting a position that they had claimed to reject.
“This is
the party that before 2024 had insisted that they were the defenders of free
speech. JD Vance went to Europe to lecture the Europeans on free speech. And
now what are they doing? They are justifying and leading a state-sponsored
cancel culture.”
Trump’s
concerns about political violence are selective. He described people who rioted
at the US Capitol on January 6 2021 as “hostages” and “patriots” and pardoned
1,500 of them on his first day back in the Oval Office. He also mocked House
speaker emerita Nancy Pelosi after an attack on her husband.
When
Trump condemned Kirk’s killing in a video message, he mentioned several
examples of “radical left political violence” but ignored attacks on Democrats.
Asked on Monday about the killing of Minnesota state representative Melissa
Hortman over the summer, Trump said, “I’m not familiar” with the case.
A recent
study of political violence by the Cato Institute, a libertarian thinktank,
found that rightwing extremists have killed six times more people than their
far left counterparts over the past half century.
Tara
Setmayer, a former Republican communications director on Capitol Hill,
observed: “They expect the Democrats and people who don’t agree with Maga’s
worldview to take the high road, that somehow the onus is on that side to be
the better angel, but it’s not expected of them.
“Donald
Trump can go out and call his political opponents scum and say that he doesn’t
care about their wellbeing. But if these people point out the vile and
controversial positions of someone like Charlie Kirk or those within their own
administration, like Stephen Miller and Pam Bondi, then they’re domestic
terrorists.”
Yet still
Trump has unwavering support from Republicans in Congress. Senator Ted Cruz of
Texas and others proposed legislation that would enable the justice department
to use racketeering laws, originally envisioned to combat organised crime, to
prosecute violent protesters and the groups that support them.
Congressman
Chip Roy of Texas wants the House to create a special committee to investigate
the non-profit groups, saying: “We must follow the money to identify the
perpetrators of the coordinated anti-American assaults being carried out
against us.”
Rightwing
commentators have also cheered on the clampdown. Laura Loomer, a conspiracy
theorist with a long record of bigoted comments, said “let’s shut the left
down” and acknowledged that she wants Trump “to be the ‘dictator’ the left
thinks he is”.
Some
analysts believe that Trump is fulfilling that ambition. Steve Schmidt, a
political strategist, said there has never before been a crime committed in the
US where the president and his allies have “used the occasion to demand a
consolidation of political power for themselves and collective punishment
against their opposition, who have been named as co-conspirators in a crime for
which they had no involvement”.
Schmidt
noted state demands that flags be lowered and tributes enforced: “What you’re
witnessing is a propaganda campaign that is ruthless, brutal and cold, right
down to the use of the highly choreographed videography and photographs from
the open casket. It’s obscene.”
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