Security boosted as thousands attend Kirk’s memorial service
Last updated: September 22, 2025 | 11:18
People gather to attend a memorial service for Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Sunday. Reuters
Thousands of mourners dressed in red, white and blue made their way through security to attend a Sunday memorial service for Charlie Kirk at an Arizona football stadium, where President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other top Republicans were to pay tribute to the assassinated right-wing activist.
Christian rock music blared through loudspeakers and pictures of Kirk were set on easels throughout the walkways of the State Farm Stadium in Glendale, which has a capacity of more than 63,000.
Crowds of people, many dressed in their Sunday best, had arrived before dawn to get inside to mourn Kirk, who was killed onstage in Utah on September 10 as he debated with college students.
Traffic jammed the surrounding roads, and overflow space was set up at another arena nearby.
Trump, speaking to reporters before flying to Arizona, said he hoped the service would be “a time of healing” and spoke of his young political ally’s influence, crediting him for building support for Republicans through his conservative student activist group, Turning Point USA.
Charlie Kirk arrives to speak before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump during a campaign rally at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas. File/AP
“He did a tremendous job, and he had a hold on youth because they loved him,” Trump said.
“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.”
Security was extremely tight, given attendance by Trump and several members of his cabinet, as well as the ongoing political turmoil in the aftermath of Kirk’s death.
People fanned each other in the heat as they waited to shuffle through metal detectors.
An older man dropped to the ground and was carried out of the line to get help. Occasional arguments broke out over line-jumpers: someone yelled “liberals!” at a group that tried to move to the front.
Large American flags hung on both sides of the main stage, which was decorated in maroon and gold.
Giant screens showed photographs of Kirk, including one in which he is leaning in to kiss his wife, Erika, who was elected as Turning Point’s chief executive last week.
Kirk, 31, was killed with a single bullet as he answered an audience member’s question at a campus event in Utah organised by Turning Point.
A screengrab from a social media video shows the moment when US right-wing activist, commentator, Charlie Kirk, an ally of US President Donald Trump was shot during an event at Utah Valley University, in Orem, Utah, US. Reuters
A 22-year-old technical college student has been charged with Kirk’s murder, and investigators say he told his romantic partner in text messages that he had killed Kirk because he had “enough of his hate.”
The killing has raised fears about the growing frequency of US political violence across the ideological spectrum, while also deepening partisan divides. Trump has cited the murder in escalating his calls for a crackdown on his political opponents, including left-wing organisations that he has blamed for the shooting even though authorities have said the gunman acted alone. The firestorm over Kirk’s assassination only intensified last week, when Disney’s ABC network abruptly pulled late-night talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel off the air after conservatives expressed outrage over remarks he made about the killing on Monday.
Hours earlier, Trump’s head of the Federal Communications Commission, Brendan Carr, threatened to use his agency to punish the network over Kimmel’s comments. Kimmel’s suspension has drawn objections from civil rights groups, Democrats and television and film writers, who say the Trump administration is using Kirk’s death as a pretext to stifle critical media in violation of the US Constitution’s free-speech protections.
The roster of speakers at Sunday’s service, titled “Building a Legacy: Remembering Charlie Kirk,” demonstrates Kirk’s influence as the leader of the country’s biggest conservative youth organisation. In addition to Trump and Vance, who was friends with Kirk, senior administration officials including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F Kennedy Jr was to address the crowd. In his remarks, Trump was expected to cast Kirk as a martyr for the conservative movement and highlight his legacy as a cultural and political force.