Perhaps more than anyone else, Charlie Kirk, the prominent Donald Trump ally and political organizer who was shot and killed Wednesday, brought hard-right politics to a generation of younger Americans, expanding the reach of Trump’s politics largely through raucous, theatrical in-person debates designed to go viral online.
It was at one such speaking event, at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, where a shooter took Kirk’s life on Wednesday, as he went back and forth with an attendee about mass shooting statistics. Kirk is survived by his wife and two small children, a 3-year-old girl and a 1-year-old boy.
Kirk, 31 when he was killed, was profoundly influential in right-wing politics in the United States, developing close friendships with several members of the Trump family, including the president himself, and bringing aggressive social conservatism to the masses, particularly young people. He was “deeply involved in vetting top positions for the administration since the election and was in constant communication with top advisers and the president himself,” ABC News reported after his death Wednesday; among other things, he successfully campaigned for the ouster of Ronna McDaniel as chair of the Republican Party last year.












