Trump arrives amid ear-splitting roar from crowd inside stadium
Lauren Gambino
at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona
An ear-splitting roar just broke out as the camera showed Donald Trump for the first time. The president flew from the White House to Glendale on Sunday morning for the service.
From a box on an upper level of the arena, Trump, wearing a red tie, pumped his fist.
“We’re going to celebrate the life of a great man today,” Trump told reporters before departing Washington earlier today. He said he was braced for a “tough day.”
Donald Trump, his son Eric, his daughter-in-law Lara Trump, and son Donald Trump Jr attend the memorial service in Glendale, Arizona. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 16.14 EDT
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Health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr just delivered a tribute to Charlie Kirk, saying:
“He understood democracy’s great advantage was that our policies were formed by ideas that triumphed in a marketplace of debate and conversation.
He thought that conversation was the only way to heal our country, and this was important, particularly important during a technological age when we are all hooked into social rhythms, social algorithms that are hacked into reptilian cords of our brain and amplify our impulses for tribalism and for division.”
Robert F Kennedy Jr speaks at a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Photograph: John Locher/APShare
Updated at 17.23 EDT
Defense secretary Pete Hegseth delivers religiously charged address, calling Kirk a ‘warrior for Christ’
Defense secretary Pete Hegseth just addressed the crowd in a highly religiously charged address filled with references to war and religious crusade.
Hegseth called Charlie Kirk “a true believer for the cause of freedom, for the power of young people, belief in our republic and our founding principles in America first and make America great again.”
He also pointed to what Kirk saw as a “spiritual war,” saying:
“You see, we always did need less government. But what, Charlie understood and infused into his movement, is we also needed a lot more God… On this Sunday morning, I’d like to think we’re all in Charlie’s church.
He went on to add:
“Charlie waged war, not with a weapon, but with a tent, a microphone, his mind and the truth and the gates of hell could not prevail against him… Charlie Kirk was a citizen who had the biblical heart of a soldier of the faith, who put on every single day the full armor of God with a smile as the Scriptures tell all Christ followers to do. Charlie Kirk a warrior for country, a warrior for Christ. He ran the race. He finished the fight.”
Pete Hegseth speaks during memorial service. Photograph: Daniel Cole/ReutersShare
Updated at 17.23 EDT
Secretary of state Marco Rubio addresses the crowd, compares Kirk to Jesus
Secretary of state Marco Rubio was the next speaker, following suit from previous speakers and comparing Charlie Kirk to historical figures including Jesus.
Addressing the crowd, Rubio said:
“Here was this voice that inspired a movement in which young Americans were told that is not true. The highest calling we are called to is to be in a successful marriage and to raise productive children. The…movement that taught them that ours was not a great country, but the greatest, most exceptional nation that has ever existed in the history of all of mankind, and that it’s worth fighting for…
God took on the form of a man and came down and lived among us, and he suffered like men, and he died like a man, but on the third day, he rose unlike any mortal man, and then, and to prove any doubters wrong, he ate with his disciples so they could see and they touched his wounds… And when he returns, there will be a new heaven and a new earth, and we will all be together, and we are going to have a great reunion there again with Charlie and all the people we love.”
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks during a memorial service for slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium, in Glendale, Arizona, U.S., September 21, 2025. Photograph: Daniel Cole/ReutersShare
Updated at 17.12 EDT
Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, has just addressed the crowd in what was a markedly political speech.
Gabbard, who was an opponent of same-sex marriage at the start of her career, said:
“Charlie, he chose our schools as his arena because he knows that they are meant to teach, to train our young people to think critically, to debate ideas, to test their strength through a clash of reason. But too often, these schools silence debate, saying words are violence and dissenting voices are hush and those who speak of God, those who speak the truth, simple, objective truths like there are only two genders in these schools, they are told you have no voice.”
Gabbard, who spoke of schools but made no mention of the slew of mass school shootings that occur each year in the US, went on to add:
“History shows this dark pattern that when ideas cannot withstand scrutiny, whether it’s the ideology of so called religious fanatics or political fanatics, they’re …terrified that their weak ideas will be exposed for what they are… They kill and terrorize their opponents, hoping to silence them. But in this evil that we have experienced that Charlie face, their flawed ideology is exposed. Because by trying to silence Charlie, his voice is now louder than ever.”
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard speaks at a memorial for Charlie Kirk, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Photograph: Ross D Franklin/APShare
Updated at 17.13 EDT
Tucker Carlson, political commentator and former Fox host, has just spoken at State Farm stadium.
In a religiously charged and charismatic speech, Carlson said:
“Charlie was a political person who was deeply interested in coalition-building and in getting the right people in office, because he knew that vast improvements are possible politically, but he also knew that politics is not the final answer. It can’t answer the deepest questions, actually, that the only real solution is Jesus.
Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change. Christianity, the gospel message, the message of Jesus begins with repentance …
This gathering and God’s presence, God’s very obvious presence in this room, the presence of Jesus, is a reminder of what we’ve known for 2,000 years, which is any attempt to extinguish the light causes it to burn brighter.”
Political commentator Tucker Carlson speaks during a memorial service for Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Photograph: Carlos Barría/ReutersShare
Updated at 16.44 EDT
White House deputy chief of staff makes incendiary speech: ‘You are nothing. You are wickedness’
Stephen Miller, the architect of Donald Trump’s hardline immigration policies, just addressed the crowd.
In an incendiary speech, Miller said:
“You thought you could kill Charlie Kirk. You have made him immortal. You have immortalized Charlie Kirk, and now millions will carry on his legacy.”
Miller, speaking as if Kirk’s killing had been incited by “our enemies”, went on to add:
“We will prevail over the forces of wickedness and evil. They cannot imagine what they have awakened … We we stand for what is good, what is virtuous, what is noble.
And to those trying to incite violence against us, those trying to foment hatred against us, what do you have? You have nothing. You are nothing. You are wickedness. You are jealousy, you are envy, you are hatred. You are nothing. You can build nothing. You can produce nothing. You can create nothing. We are the ones who build.”
Prosecutors have said that they suspect 22-year old Tyler Robinson killed Kirk because he personally had become sick of what he perceived to be Kirk’s “hatred”.
But, citing three sources familiar with the investigation into Kirk’s killing, NBC reported on Saturday that federal authorities have not found any link between Robinson and leftwing groups, on which the Trump administration has threatened to crack down after the deadly shooting.
Millers comments came days after he threatened a crackdown on what he called a “vast domestic terror movement” without providing evidence. Miller said the administration would use the federal government to achieve this goal.
“With God as my witness, we are going to use every resource we have at the Department of Justice, [Department of] Homeland Security and throughout this government to identify, disrupt, dismantle and destroy these networks,” Miller said, adding that they would do this “in Charlie’s name”.
Updated at 16.47 EDT
Trump arrives amid ear-splitting roar from crowd inside stadium
Lauren Gambino
at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona
An ear-splitting roar just broke out as the camera showed Donald Trump for the first time. The president flew from the White House to Glendale on Sunday morning for the service.
From a box on an upper level of the arena, Trump, wearing a red tie, pumped his fist.
“We’re going to celebrate the life of a great man today,” Trump told reporters before departing Washington earlier today. He said he was braced for a “tough day.”
Donald Trump, his son Eric, his daughter-in-law Lara Trump, and son Donald Trump Jr attend the memorial service in Glendale, Arizona. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 16.14 EDT
Charlie Kirk’s memorial service kicked off with religious tributes made by his colleagues and friends who recounted their memories of the slain 31-year old who founded the conservative advocacy organization Turning Point USA.
The tributes then slowly made way for more political messaging with very few calls of unity.
Addressing the crowd was Ben Carson, a former Republican presidential candidate and Trump’s transporation secretary during his first term.
In a politically charged address, Carson made references to 1950s communism and alleged progressive attempts to gain control of media outlets and Hollywood.
Meanwhile, Florida’s Republican representative Anna Paulina Luna, compared Kirk to Martin Luther King Jr, the civil rights icon who Kirk once called “awful” and Kirk claimed “said one good thing he actually didn’t believe”.
Addressing the crowd, Luna said that Kirk “altered the trajectory of our modern fight against cultural decay and ideological tyranny”.
Updated at 16.36 EDT
Robert Mackey
Republican lawmakers in Oklahoma introduced legislation this week that would require every public university in the state to construct “a Charlie Kirk Memorial Plaza”, with a statue of the assassinated Republican activist and a sign calling him a “modern civil rights leader”, or pay monthly fines.
Each plaza must also include “permanent signage commemorating Charlie Kirk’s courage and faith and explaining the significance of Charlie Kirk as a voice of a generation, modern civil rights leader, vocal Christian, martyr for truth and faith, and free speech advocate”.
The state-dictated reference to Kirk as a civil rights leader echoes the widespread effort on the right to cast the founder of the conservative youth group Turning Point USA as a figure equivalent to Martin Luther King Jr, a man Kirk once called “awful”.
After everyone from a Georgia representative to a deputy chief of the New York police department made the comparison with MLK, the slain civil rights leader’s son, Martin Luther King III, took time this week to reject it, noting that Kirk had accused prominent Black women of lacking “the brain processing power to be taken seriously”, while his father “was about bringing people together”.
“When you’re doing that, it’s a disservice to unification,” King told a reporter in Virginia. Kirk, he said, “certainly was a force in this society and a significant force, but I just disagree with the position that his force was about inclusiveness. When you denigrate Black women and say that somebody is in a position just because of the color of their skin, that’s gravely false.”
Donald Trump’s motorcade has arrived at State Farm stadium a few minutes ago, according to multiple reports.
Trump is expected to be the last speaker at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service.
Donald Trump’s presidential motorcade arrives for a memorial service for Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium, in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Photograph: Cheney Orr/ReutersA motorcade for Donald Trump arrives at State Farm stadium on Sunday. Photograph: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/APShare
Updated at 15.31 EDT
Alaina Demopoulos
In the days after his killing, Charlie Kirk was remembered by his allies as a great debater. A quote taken from a widely shared video of Kirk discussing his life’s work – “when people stop talking, that’s when violence happens” – emblematized such eulogies.
Kirk toured American college campuses with his rightwing non-profit Turning Point USA, where he would set up a tent, table and microphone, and debate with undergrads. The goal, he said, was to “save western civilization”, and remembrances after his death positioned him as a budding statesman – a conservative hero who strode across the political divide for the sake of open dialogue.
Kirk applied basic rules of civility to his debate style, asking opponents their name and saying it was nice to meet them. He engaged young people in political discourse at a time when society has been split into bitterly antagonistic camps. But his critics are taking issue with any version of his legacy that does not account for the bigoted nature of his arguments. They are also closely examining his very style of debate.
“I don’t think Charlie entered debates to come to a common consensus or to discover the truth,” said Mason, a 26-year-old graduate student who debated with Kirk on the YouTube show Surrounded last fall. “I think Charlie came to debates to verbally beat his opponents.”
ShareTrump arrives in Arizona for Charlie Kirk’s memorial service
Donald Trump has arrived on Air Force One in Arizona for Charlie Kirk’s memorial service.
Trump, alongside other high-profile cabinet members including JD Vance and defense secretary Pete Hegseth, are set to deliver remarks on Kirk.
Donald Trump steps off Air Force One in Glendale, Arizona on Sunday. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 15.06 EDT
Here are some images coming through the newswires from State Farm stadium as Charlie Kirk’s memorial service goes under way:
A person raises their arms while attending a memorial service for slain far-right commentator Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium, in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Photograph: Callaghan O’Hare/ReutersTesla CEO Elon Musk and former US representative Matt Gaetz attend a memorial service for slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium, in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Photograph: Daniel Cole/ReutersA woman is overcome with emotion in the overflow area outside during a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk on Sunday in Glendale, Arizona. Photograph: Jae C Hong/APAn attendee reacts during the public memorial service of political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Photograph: Caroline Brehman/EPAPolitical commentator Tucker Carlson arrives for a memorial service for slain far-right activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium on Sunday. Photograph: Carlos Barría/ReutersShare
Updated at 14.57 EDT
Lauren Gambino
at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona
Many people traveled far and wide to pay tribute to Charlie Kirk in Glendale on Sunday. Among them was Eddie Wallin, a 30-year-old from Sweden who crossed the Atlantic to honor the slain organizer.
His journey took him from Sweden to Texas, where he rented a car and said he drove 17 hours straight to make it to Glendale in time for the memorial. He subsisted on bananas and other sugary provisions to keep him alert.
Wallin, wearing a white shirt emblazoned with “Freedom,” said he had first met Kirk in 2019, during a trip to Texas. He recalled that Kirk, smiling, told him he’d never thought he’d meet a Swedish conservative. Six years later, Wallin said he encountered Kirk again during the 2024 presidential election and was surprised when the organizer, by then a hugely prominent figure in Maga politics, remembered him.
“After so many years he remembered me,” Wallin said. “I will remember him for my whole life.”
Updated at 14.38 EDT
Lauren Gambino
at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona
For much of the morning, attendees in the packed stadium have been listening to Christian worship music.
Many sang along with the lyrics, while some raised their hands and swayed. It’s a striking contrast from a Trump rally where the play list often features Lee Greenwood’s God Bless the USA, the Village People’s YMCA and Luciano Pavarotti’s“Ave Maria”.
The event, like Turning Points itself, has blended faith and politics for a new generation of conservatives.
Chris Tomlin, a Christian music singer, is singing now along with the audience, which joins him for the refrain: “You will always be holy / holy forever.”
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Robert Mackey
As he left the White House for Phoenix this morning, Donald Trump praised Charlie Kirk’s mobilization of college students through Turning Point USA, the organization that he founded instead of going to college himself.
“For a young man, he did a great job, a tremendous job,” Trump said. “He had a hold on youth because they loved him. They respected him. And if you go back 10 years, those colleges were dangerous places for conservatives. And now they’re hot. They’re very hot. Just like this country is hot.”
As our colleague Alice Speri reported, TPUSA has over 900 chapters on college campuses and claims to have “incubated” more than 350 rightwing influencers over the years.
Kirk himself, however, was broadly unpopular among college students, according to polling after his death. Research done for Puck last week revealed that 70% of students surveyed, at community colleges, technical colleges, trade schools, and public and private four-year institutions, said that they disagreed with Kirk’s views. Just 30% said they agreed with what he had to say.
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Lauren Gambino
at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona
All around the arena are black and white photos of Charlie Kirk, with his wife, Erika, and their children. One shows him tossing a Maga hat into the crowd and several of him speaking.
Emotions were raw in the stadium, as the band played a lengthy instrumental interlude and the camera panned the crowd, which rose to its feet, holding red, black and white signs that said “Turning Points.” One group held a poster with a sketch of Kirk and the biblical verse, “Here I am Lord. Send me.”
Loud applause rang out when the monitor showed an image of Kirk. An announcer called Kirk a “our friend and hero”.
An attendee holds a placard during the public memorial service of political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Photograph: Caroline Brehman/EPAShare
Updated at 14.11 EDT
Charlie Kirk’s memorial service is set to begin shortly.
Among the notable speakers include Donald Trump, JD Vance, defense secretary Pete Hegseth and secretary of state Marco Rubio.
Kirk’s wife, Erika, is also due to deliver remarks.
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Lauren Gambino
at the State Farm stadium in Glendale, Arizona
Officials and prominent Maga world influencers are filling the arena.
Congresswoman Lauren Boebert was among those who have arrived. Conservative activist Scott Presler posed for photos and Steve Bannon was spotted being escorted around into the venue. Elon Musk said on X he was in attendance.
Credentialed alongside the traditional press corps are several new media podcast hosts, YouTubers and young influencers, including some children – a testament to his vast influence on young conservatives.
Updated at 14.04 EDT