Charlie Kirk’s widow sidesteps call to condemn Trump rhetoric at CBS town hall
U.S. President Donald Trump embraces Erika Kirk, during a memorial service for her husband, slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, at State Farm Stadium in Arizona, U.S., September 21, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

Erika Kirk, the widow of slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, faced an emotional and pointed question during a CBS News town hall on Saturday night when a Utah student urged her to condemn violent political rhetoric from President Donald Trump. The question came from Hunter Kozak, the last person to speak to Kirk before his assassination at a campus event. Kozak acknowledged Erika Kirk’s calls for peace but pressed her to use her platform to urge Trump — whom he described as “the most powerful and influential person on earth” — to lower the temperature surrounding political violence.

Asked directly whether she would condemn Trump’s rhetoric, Erika Kirk declined to single out the president, instead emphasizing her personal opposition to violence and shifting the focus to family and individual responsibility. “No, I will never agree with political violence,” she said, adding that what people absorb from the outside world can influence behavior. Her response, while reiterating a rejection of violence, stopped short of addressing Trump’s specific statements, highlighting the ongoing tension over political rhetoric in the aftermath of her husband’s killing.

Charlie Kirk’s widow sidesteps call to condemn Trump rhetoric at CBS town hall