The wave of companies and other institutions firing or suspending employees over what they’ve said in reaction to last week’s killing of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk has expanded in recent days, as some of his supporters in and outside the government amp up a push against speech they say crosses lines.
The Secret Service, several U.S. airlines, Office Depot, and Nasdaq said they were among more than 30 employers that have sanctioned or fired employees in reaction to their statements about Kirk’s killing. Roughly three dozen workers are reported to have been suspended or fired over their responses to Kirk’s killing, including employees of Clemson University, MSNBC, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Carolina Panthers. Several local fire departments and school districts said they had also suspended or terminated employees over their remarks.
On Monday, while hosting Kirk’s podcast, Vice President JD Vance suggested people tell bosses if they see someone celebrating Kirk’s killing. “When you see someone celebrating Charlie’s murder, call them out,” Vance said. “And hell, call their employer.”
A website, which calls itself the Charlie Kirk Data Foundation, went viral on social media after publishing a searchable list of thousands of people accused of posting critical messages of Kirk after his killing. On Sunday it said the list, which it subsequently took down, had grown to more than 63,000 people. The backers of the website did not identify themselves and declined to comment when contacted via a message on X.
At a time when people have unprecedented ability to share their instant reactions with vast audiences on social media, the actions by employers have stirred a debate over employees’ speech rights, the role of public pressure campaigns and what is appropriate public commentary on a violent event like Kirk’s killing.
Robby Starbuck, a conservative activist who was a longtime friend of Kirk and has previously waged social media campaigns against big companies over their diversity, equity and inclusion policies, said he has been amplifying social media posts calling for worker firings over comments about Kirk’s killing because he wants to send a message “that this behavior is intolerable in a sane society.”
Rejecting any comparison to what he called “left wing cancel culture,” he said: “The left canceled Dr. Seuss because the books offended them and they tried to get people fired for not getting the COVID vaccine. We’re demanding action because people mocked or celebrated an assassination in broad daylight.”
Adam Goldstein, vice president of strategic initiatives at the nonprofit and nonpartisan Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, which has argued against incursions on free speech, said the pattern of some people facing condemnation for being “mocking or insufficiently sympathetic” plays out “again and again after every tragedy.” He noted similar dynamics played out after 9/11 and the 2024 assassination attempt on then-presidential candidate Donald Trump.