Just weeks before his assassination in Utah, a resurfaced video showed Charlie Kirk embracing his young daughter on live television, leaving supporters heartbroken.
The clip, filmed on the Fox & Friends Weekend set, captured his 3-year-old running across the studio into his arms. As a first-time guest host, his wide smile reflected a tender side rarely seen by the public. For Kirk and his wife Erika, who often kept their children private, it offered a rare glimpse of him as a devoted father.
That moment now feels tragically different. Kirk, 31, was shot in the neck while speaking at Utah Valley University during the American Comeback Tour. He had just finished addressing a question about mass shootings when chaos erupted. He was rushed to the hospital but pronounced dead two hours later.
The FBI and Utah police continue a manhunt for the gunman. The attack came after more than 6,000 students signed a petition opposing Kirk’s presence on campus, underscoring the polarizing nature of his activism.
Kirk’s career began in 2012 when he co-founded Turning Point USA as a teenager. By his early twenties, he had spoken at both the 2016 and 2020 Republican National Conventions. Over a decade, he built the group into the largest conservative youth network in the country, with thousands of campus chapters and initiatives like Turning Point Faith and Turning Point Academy.
Supporters credit him with inspiring a new generation of conservatives and playing a key role in Donald Trump’s election victories in 2016 and 2024.
For Erika, a former Miss Arizona USA, and their two children—a daughter and a 16-month-old son—the loss is deeply personal. The couple had just celebrated their fourth wedding anniversary in May.
While tributes pour in, including from President Trump, who called him “The Great, and even Legendary,” the image of a father’s embrace lingers as a lasting memory for his family.