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JD Vance: Trump administration will ‘dismantle’ leftist groups promoting violence

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While serving as the guest host of Charlie Kirk’s podcast Monday, Vice President JD Vance vowed that the Trump administration will seek to “dismantle” left-wing organizations that he said promoted the violence that led to the conservative activist’s assassination last week.

“Charlie was gunned down in broad daylight, and well-funded institutions of the Left lied about what he said so as to justify his murder. This is soulless and evil,” Vance said.

The two-hour broadcast of “The Charlie Kirk Show,” produced by the organization Kirk founded, Turning Point USA, was livestreamed from Vance’s ceremonial office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. It featured appearances from White House aides and administration officials as well as friends of Kirk.

Vance specifically cited an article in The Nation magazine that he said falsely stated that Kirk had made racist statements. The author, he said, had also expressed “glee over a young husband and young father’s death.”

“Did you know that the George Soros Open Society Foundation and the Ford Foundation — the groups who funded that disgusting article justifying Charlie’s death — do you know they benefit from generous tax treatment?” Vance said.

“They are literally subsidized by you and me, the American taxpayer, and how do they reward us? By setting fire to the house built by the American family over 250 years,” he said.

The Trump administration, Vance said, will be working in the coming months to shut down organizations that facilitate politically motivated violence.

“We’re not always going to get it right. We will sometimes move more slowly than you would like. We will sometimes move more slowly than I want us to. But I promise you that we will explore every option to bring real unity to our country and stop those who would kill their fellow Americans because they don’t like what they say,” Vance said.

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, a guest on the program, told Vance that Kirk was a “treasured friend” of 10 years. He also vowed to go after those who may have aided and abetted Kirk’s killer, calling it “a vast domestic terror movement.”

Miller described a coordinated movement to incite violence in the United States.

“The organized doxing campaigns, the organized riots, the organized street violence, the organized campaigns of dehumanization, vilification, posting people’s addresses, combining that with messaging that’s designed to trigger inside violence and the actual organized cells that carry out and facilitate the violence,” he said.

“With God as my witness, we are going to use every resource we have at the Department of Justice, Homeland Security, and throughout this government to identify, disrupt, dismantle, and destroy these networks and make America safe again for the American people. It will happen, and we will do it in Charlie’s name,” Miller said.

Vance, during the program, said that polling has shown that liberals are more likely than conservatives to “be happy about the death of a political opponent” and to say that political violence is sometimes justified.

“The data is clear. People on the left are much likelier to defend and celebrate political violence,” Vance said.

“That problem has terrible consequences. The leader of our party, Donald J. Trump, escaped an assassin’s bullet by less than an inch. Our House majority leader, Steven Scalise, came within seconds of death by an assassin himself. Now, the most influential conservative activist in generations, our friend Charlie, has been murdered,” he said.

Tributes for Kirk

The vice president, in paying tribute to Kirk, remembered his friend as a faithful Christian and political visionary. He recalled Kirk as a man of great faith who inspired others to be bold in sharing their views.

“On a podcast a couple of months back, Charlie was asked about how he’d want to be remembered if he died. His answer: ‘I want to be remembered for courage, for my faith,’” Vance said.

“In this dark moment for our country, I think that’s the greatest lesson any of us can take from Charlie, to have faith, to have faith in the Lord and to be bold in how we glorify him, to be bold in our pursuits as Charlie was in his,” he said.

When asked by Vance to share something about Kirk, conservative podcast host Tucker Carlson spoke of the role that faith played in Kirk’s life.

“His Christianity was sincere, and his commitment to Jesus was totally sincere. It sometimes isn’t, especially in public figures who throw out Bible verses they don’t understand and stuff like that,” Carlson said.

“But in his case … it informed every single part of his life, from his marriage, to the way he treated his children, to the way he treated his staff, to the way he approached disagreement, to the way he thought of other people, which was always primarily as people first,” he said.

Vance, in his concluding remarks, said Kirk was a man “who told the truth in every place, in every environment.”

“The most important truth Charlie told is this: that long ago, a man begotten, not made, came down from heaven, and by the Holy Spirit, was incarnate of the Virgin Mary and became man. For our sake, he was crucified under Pontius Pilate, and suffered death, and was buried, and rose again on the third day,” Vance said.

“Charlie believed, as I do, that all the truth he told flowed from that fundamental principle, he said. “I really do believe that we can come together in this country. I believe we must. But unity, real unity, can be found only after climbing the mountain of truth,” he said.

Vance said that after speaking with Kirk’s widow, Erika, and the rest of the Kirk family, he was struck by the example his friend set, as a husband who “was never cross or mean-spirited” to his wife.

“Maybe the best way that I can contribute and the best way that I could honor my dear friend is to be the best husband that I can be, to be the husband to my wife that he was to his,” Vance said.

This story was first published by the National Catholic Register, CNA’s sister news partner, and has been adapted by CNA.

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