76report

34fe39b0c2

September 13, 2025
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76report

September 13, 2025

Remembering and Honoring Charlie Kirk

It has been a painful week. Charlie Kirk—a 31-year old husband, father and American thought leader—was senselessly murdered. Below, Trish and Rob share some reflections on his life, what he stood for, and how we can defend and perpetuate the ideas he championed.

Remembering Charlie Kirk

Trish Regan


“Wow, that kid is good! Let’s make sure we get him back.”


Those were my exact words to my producer nearly a decade ago, moments after interviewing a young Charlie Kirk on my Fox Business show.


At the time, Charlie was just 21 years old—a kid, really—yet he was about to take the world by storm.


I know talent when I see it. And Charlie had it.


His insightful, original, and often provocative analysis quickly made him a regular guest on my program. Unlike so many political commentators armed with talking points, Charlie never needed them.


His breadth of knowledge stretched far beyond headlines. He could dive into history, the Federal Reserve, economics, or the cultural battles that defined his career, always with clarity and conviction.


Charlie’s intellect, combined with charisma, gravitas, and good looks, was a powerful combination that often unsettled his critics. He was a target precisely because he was effective.


In 2018, after being attacked by dozens of Antifa protesters outside a diner with Candace Owens, he told my audience that the political climate had grown dangerous, the rhetoric too violent.


Still, Charlie refused to back down. He doubled down—dedicated to offering young people a different perspective, one unbound by the ideological conformity of woke institutions.


I knew him to be a fair man, one who wanted nothing more than the best for our country and its future.


Over the years, our professional paths crossed again. After leaving Fox, I launched my own podcast, and Charlie and I found ourselves

represented by the same media company.


Our shows were different in tone and style, but we shared a common belief in the American dream for everyone.


This week has been one of the hardest of my career. I was preparing my live show, when word came that he had been shot. At first, I refused to believe it. I assumed it was a mistake. But it wasn’t.


I went live that afternoon with the news that my friend Charlie Kirk—someone I was proud to have introduced to a national television audience—had been killed.


I’ve covered tragedy before: 9/11 from the CBS anchor desk in San Francisco as the towers fell, the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, the Boston Marathon bombing. But I had never before covered the death of a friend in real time. It was surreal and deeply painful.


For the first 23 minutes of my broadcast, I clung to hope. But then came confirmation from President Trump: Charlie Kirk, one of the brightest stars in the conservative movement, was gone. He was just 31 years old.


For the first time in my career, I cried live on-air.


It is an unspeakable tragedy. He had so much more to give. Yet his legacy will live on.


My own children loved Charlie’s videos. It’s one thing for kids to hear their mother’s politics—quite another to discover someone like Charlie on their own. Through him, they found a passion for intellectual debate, for history, for the Constitution, for God. I will forever be grateful to him for that.


Charlie reminded us all of the importance of civility, of respect for one another’s opinions, even amid disagreement.


He will be deeply missed. But the movement he helped build will continue, inspired by his example and his courage.


Rest in peace, my friend. You will remain in our hearts and minds forever.

Charlie Kirk’s Economic Wake-Up Call

Rob Hordon


I didn’t know Charlie personally, but like many Americans, it feels like I did. This is a testament to his unique ability to communicate and his authenticity as a public figure.


There was no act here. He had his ideas and his values. He was on a mission to share them with the country to make it better.


Like any murder, this was an immense personal tragedy. The fact that he was so young makes it even worse.


This was a tragedy for the country, too. He was a public intellectual in the best tradition. He was forthright in his ideas, he was grounded in facts and logic, and he sought out opposing viewpoints.


What he was doing on college campuses was innovative and exciting—getting real debates going, pushing young minds, challenging orthodoxies.


Charlie was known for using the Socratic method in his campus engagements. He would go back and forth with students and zero in on fundamental questions.


Like Socrates himself, he paid the ultimate price for his fearless truth-seeking.


Charlie’s economic vision


Charlie was above all a man of ideas, wise beyond his years.


These included many economic ideas, which tend to get much less attention relative to his opinions on more hot-button subjects like gender, race and immigration.


To honor Charlie, I will elaborate on some of these important insights, which had become much more central to his message in recent months.


It was fascinating to learn in recent days how Charlie actually first came onto the scene. As a high school senior, he wrote an article that got published in Breitbart about left-wing bias in the AP Economics curriculum.


The article is still available here and very much worth reading.

Students are being pushed toward an education that demonizes free enterprise while advocating top-down government, deficit spending and class warfare. - Charlie Kirk (4/26/2012)

Young Charlie was right, in my opinion. Academic economics has been dominated by big government, Keynesian thinkers, like Paul Krugman, whom he highlighted in the article.


Charlie was writing in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis. It may be hard to believe, but he was just a kid during the crisis.


The crisis played out between 2008 and 2009, although the shockwaves continue to reverberate. As he has explained, it had a major effect on his family and the trajectory of his life.


Just a few weeks ago, I was driving back home from the Midwest to the East Coast. My wife and I had just dropped off one of our three sons (who happened to be an AP Economics scholar himself) for his first year at college.


Driving for some 13 hours, we had a chance to listen to a recent podcast with Charlie that focused on the subject of economics. It was one of Charlie’s last and made a big impression on me.


“Debt slavery”


Speaking to Tucker Carlson towards the end of July, Charlie offered a wake-up call to conservatives, many of whom he felt were oblivious to the extreme economic anxiety of younger Americans.

We have spent too much money, borrowed too much money, we have deteriorated our currency, and the purchasing power every generation is getting weaker…. So you have a generation that is renting a lot more than it’s owning. So when you do not own something, why would you defend it? And so you find then political radicalization start to seep in because an entire generation is getting routinely cynical year over year as their net worth either stays at zero or goes into negative. - Charlie Kirk (7/21/2025)

Charlie pointed to student loans, credit card debt, and the latest financial innovation—Buy Now, Pay Later—all of which are sending members of the younger generation into “debt slavery.”


As he explained, Baby Boomers have benefited from decades of rising asset prices, low-cost education and a high degree of job security.


American youth today, especially in the aftermath of the Biden inflation wave, is confronted with immense college debt, unaffordable housing, high prices for everything, and a shaky job market.


The big risk, as he saw it, is that this generation falls prey to economic radicalism. He took the rise of Zohran Mamdani in New York City, who has been propelled by young voters, quite seriously as a “coming attraction of what is coming next.”


Charlie encouraged us to look to the achievements of Teddy Roosevelt for answers. We “want an ownership economy,” so that people “feel invested” and “have real equity.”


Charlie expressed that he would be pivoting his organization, Turning Point USA, to focus on these economic challenges facing young Americans.


Generational crisis


Charlie was the pre-eminent voice of young conservatives. Youth voters supported Trump in record numbers in 2024. Charlie played an indispensable role in driving this outcome.


AI is just now starting to have an impact on the job market, threatening employment opportunities, especially for entry-level workers.


This is absolutely the moment that Americans need to focus on supporting economic policies that will work for young Americans, help them form families and allow them to chase the American Dream.


Charlie had many things to say on a wide range of topics but was emphatic in the last weeks of his life that the economic challenges facing young Americans need to be prioritized… or bad things will happen politically.


America is broken in many ways. Charlie’s murder itself is evidence of this.


Charlie was right about many things, including the overlapping political and economic crisis ahead, if young Americans find themselves left behind.


We can honor his legacy by focusing our attention on saving American capitalism for the next generation.


I personally don’t know what all the answers are—and it is tragic that Charlie will not be here to help guide us— but I do intend to stay focused on this crucial problem that he so effectively illuminated right before he was taken from us.

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