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Hundreds were punished in ‘pro-Trump machinery of retaliation’ after Charlie Kirk’s death

November 19, 2025
in News
Hundreds were punished in ‘pro-Trump machinery of retaliation’ after Charlie Kirk’s death

Two months after the assassination of MAGA podcaster Charlie Kirk, over 600 people have been targeted by the government with firings, suspensions, investigations and other actions, Reuters reports.

Educators, they note, are the main target, noting that “more than 350 education workers were fired, suspended or investigated in the days following the assassination, including 50 academics and senior university administrators, three high school principals, two cheerleading coaches and a theology instructor.”

Reuters reports that “Republican officials publicly threatened to deprive universities and schools of taxpayer funds unless specific critics of Kirk were fired.”

One of those people, Lauren Vaughn, a kindergarten assistant in South Carolina, was fired from her job after posting a Kirk quote defending the Second Amendment on social media followed by the now ubiquitous liberal rallying cry for gun control, “thoughts and prayers.”

According to a Reuters review of court records, public statements, local media reports and interviews with two dozen people who were fired or otherwise disciplined, Vaughn “was one of more than 600 Americans fired, suspended, placed under investigation or disciplined by employers for comments about Kirk’s September 10 assassination.”

At least 15 people were punished for “allegedly invoking ‘karma’ or ‘divine justice,’” they note, “and at least nine others were disciplined for variations on ‘good riddance.’”

“Other offending posts appeared to exult in the killing or express hope that other Republican figures would be next,” they add.

But others like Vaughn were disciplined for simply criticizing Kirk’s politics, they note.

“This account is the most comprehensive to date of the backlash against Kirk’s critics, tracing how senior officials in President Donald Trump’s administration, local Republican lawmakers and allied influencers mobilized to enforce the Trump movement’s views,” Reuters explains.

“The story maps the pro-Trump machinery of retaliation now reshaping American political life, detailing its scale and tactics, ranging from shaming on social media to public pressure on employers and threats to defund institutions,” they add.

While Reuters notes that “Americans sometimes lose their jobs after speaking out in heated political moments,” the post-Kirk situation was different “because of its reach and its public backing from Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other top government officials.”

“It represents a striking about-face for Republicans, who for years castigated the left for what they called ‘cancel culture’ – the ostracism or punishment of those whose views were deemed unacceptable,” they add.

Vaughn is challenging her dismissal in a federal lawsuit filed September 18, seeking reinstatement, they write, but the school district maintains that her post “appeared to endorse Mr. Kirk’s murder or indicate that it was ‘worth’ him losing his life to protect Americans’ constitutional rights.”

Like Vaughn, Julie Strebe, a sheriff’s deputy in Salem, Missouri, lost her job after posting comments on Facebook about the shooting, including, “Empathy is not owed to oppressors.’

“She said her bosses were besieged with calls for her dismissal and that, at one point, a hand-drawn sign appeared across from her home reading, ‘Julie Strebe Supports the Assassination of Charles Kirk,’” and has since had to install five surveillance cameras at her house to protect herself.

Reuters notes that “many Republican officials have embraced the punitive campaign,” proposing “extraordinary measures,” from lifetime social media bans to revoking visas over those they deem to have reveled in Kirk’s death.

“Some academics compared the backlash to the ‘Red Scare,’ the anti-Communist purge that peaked in the 1950s, when officials, labor leaders and Hollywood figures were accused of Communist ties,” Reuters notes.

Landon Storrs, a University of Iowa history professor, agrees, saying, “there are very disturbing parallels.”

Even Trump loyalist Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) says it has gone too far, warning on his podcast that letting government decide “what speech we like and what we don’t” sets a dangerous precedent. Silencing voices like Jimmy Kimmel’s might feel good, he said, but “when it’s used to silence every conservative in America, we will regret it.”

Far right social media influencers like the X account Libs of TikTok started the revenge campaign almost immediately following Kirk’s death, Reuters says.

“In the week after the shooting, Libs of TikTok shared the names and profiles of at least 134 people accused of celebrating violence or mocking Kirk’s memory, frequently tagging Trump administration officials including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Attorney General Pam Bondi. At times, the influencer posted disciplinary actions taken against specific government employees,” they write.

The people Reuters has identified may not be accurate, they say, noting that “the tally of more than 600 people punished for criticizing Kirk is likely an undercount. Many companies and government organizations haven’t publicly disclosed terminations or suspensions.”

The fallout has led to many peoples’ silence, they report, saying, “The retaliation has silenced many voices. Scores of people who posted anti-Kirk comments have since scrubbed or locked their accounts, Reuters found. Others said in interviews that they are pushing back.”

One of those, Kimberly Hunt, an HR worker in Arizona who was fired for her Kirk comments, is doing just that.

Hunt says she has raised more than $88,000 from a GoFundMe campaign titled, “Doxxed, Fired, but Not Silenced,” saying she wants to use the money to further her education, become a content creator, and keep calling out people like Kirk.

“It’s definitely just emboldened me,” she says.

Not so for Florida Atlantic University associate professor Karen Leader, who was placed on administrative leave for her comments after a former staffer of Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) shared screenshots of her posts and tagged her employer.

“Whether my career is over or not, I don’t know,” Leader says. “But my life has changed.”

The post Hundreds were punished in ‘pro-Trump machinery of retaliation’ after Charlie Kirk’s death appeared first on Raw Story.

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