Washington: Charlie Kirk was one of the highest profile conservative activists and media personalities in the US, and a trusted ally of President Donald Trump.

He was shot dead on Wednesday at the age of 31 while hosting a college event for Turning Point USA, the organisation he co-founded, in what police are calling a targeted shooting.

President Donald Trump announced the shocking news of Kirk's death, paying tribute on Truth Social: "The Great, and even Legendary, Charlie Kirk, is dead. No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States of America better than Charlie."

Kirk was seen as both the future of conservative activism - as well as a highly polarising figure.

The son of an architect who grew up in the well-to-do Chicago suburb of Prospect Heights, Kirk attended an Illinois community college before dropping out to devote himself to political activism.

He also applied unsuccessfully for West Point, the elite US military academy. Kirk often referred tongue-in-cheek to his lack of a college degree when debating students and academics on esoteric topics such as post-modernism.

He was an avid public speaker, touring the country addressing Republican events, many of which were popular with members of the ultra-conservative Tea Party movement, and his daily talk radio show had millions of followers on social media.

Turning Point, which he started at age 18, aimed to spread conservative ideals at liberal-leaning US colleges.

The event on Wednesday at Utah Valley University, where he was gunned down, was the first stop on a planned 15-event "American Comeback Tour" of college campuses, where attendees were invited to argue with Kirk.

What did Charlie Kirk stand for?

His social media and his eponymous daily podcast often offered clips of him debating with students about issues like climate change, faith and family values.

Kirk's comments on gender, race and politics often drew fierce liberal criticism. His opposition to gun control was among issues he discussed.
A few months ago, he said: "It's worth it to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment".

A clip of Trump himself plays at the beginning of Kirk's podcast: "I want to thank Charlie, he's an incredible guy, his spirit, his love of this country, he's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organisations ever created."

The non-profit he founded, Turning Point USA - a large part of his legacy - began after President Barack Obama was re-elected in 2012.

Its mission, aimed at young people, is to organise students to "promote the principles of fiscal responsibility, free markets, and limited government". It now has chapters at more than 850 colleges.

It played a key role in the get-out-the-vote effort for Trump and other Republican candidates in last year's election. He was also widely credited with helping to register tens of thousands of new voters and flipping Arizona for Trump.

The relationship between Kirk and Trump grew after Trump's victory, with Kirk attending Trump's inauguration in January in Washington DC.

He was a regular visitor at the White House during both Trump terms in office.

According to the New York Times, he played golf with Trump just two days before the president's 2025 presidential inauguration.

In January he travelled with Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr, to Greenland, as the then-incoming president was arguing that the US should own the Arctic territory.

Kirk also addressed the Oxford Union - a debating society at Oxford University - earlier this year, and in 2020, wrote a best-seller, The Maga Doctrine, a reference to Trump's "Make America Great Again" campaign.

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Bengaluru (PTI): Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah has accused the EC of "double standards" and "bias" after it sought details on the state’s guarantee schemes in Davanagere and Bagalkot districts, where bypolls are scheduled for Thursday.

In a post on 'X' on Wednesday, Siddaramaiah said the Election Commission of India had asked the Karnataka government for information on fund releases under five ongoing guarantee schemes in the constituencies going to polls.

The polls were necessitated following the deaths of senior Congress MLAs Shamanur Shivashankarappa and H Y Meti, respectively.

The schemes are Gruha Jyothi, which provides 200 units of free electricity to every household; Gruha Lakshmi, offering Rs 2,000 to women heading families; and Anna Bhagya, supplying 10 kg of rice per month to each member of BPL families.

In addition, Yuva Nidhi grants Rs 3,000 to unemployed graduates and Rs 1,500 to unemployed diploma holders aged 18–25 for two years, while Shakti enables women to travel free of charge within Karnataka on government non-luxury buses.

Siddaramaiah alleged that the ECI had remained silent when similar cash transfer schemes were announced in Maharashtra and Bihar ahead of elections, calling the scrutiny of Karnataka’s schemes a "clear case of bias".

"In states like Maharashtra and Bihar, cash transfer schemes were announced or fast-tracked just before elections, directly benefiting voters. Yet the ECI remained silent. This is not neutrality—it is complicity," he said.

The CM accused the BJP and NDA governments of "a double standard", noting that when they act, the ECI "looks the other way", but when Karnataka fulfils its promises, it faces "intense scrutiny".

He added that targeting the state’s guarantee schemes is "not just political but anti-poor, anti-women, and anti-Karnataka."

Siddaramaiah clarified that these schemes were not launched in connection with the bypolls but are ongoing programmes implemented as part of the Congress government’s commitments from the 2023 Assembly elections.

Funds are transferred regularly to beneficiaries in a transparent and structured manner, he added.

"The guarantees are part of governance—a direct investment in human dignity, household stability, and economic participation, not inducement," he said.

He also accused the BJP of "hypocrisy", saying that while it criticises Karnataka’s schemes as "freebies", it rolls out similar programmes in states it governs.

"The Karnataka model has set a benchmark for the country. What is deeply concerning, however, is the ECI’s selective approach," Siddaramaiah added.