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"One of one": Kirk assassination leaves vacuum for MAGA's outside enforcers

"One of one": Kirk assassination leaves vacuum for MAGA's outside enforcers
Charlie Kirk's assassination has dealt a significant blow to MAGA's ability to pressure Washington and the Republican Party from outside the White House.Why it matters: The right-wing media ecosystem is vast, with several figures wielding large audiences. But few can channel grassroots anger into real fear of primary challenges — the kind of pressure that shapes lawmakers' behavior.Kirk was one of those influencers, and already this year had shown his unique ability to bend GOP members of Congress to MAGA's will.Driving the news: MAGA media functions like an information army. President Trump is the commander-in-chief, while Kirk — along with figures like Donald Trump Jr. and Steve Bannon — served as a top general.Kirk first proved his clout in Trump 2.0 during bruising confirmation battles for some of Trump's more controversial Cabinet picks, like Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard.His pressure campaign was credited with swaying skeptical Republicans, including Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who ultimately voted for Hegseth before announcing her retirement. (Ernst's allies insist the decision was her own.)Kirk's record was not perfect: He lobbied Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) to support Ed Martin as Trump's pick to be U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, but Tillis refused (though he also decided not to seek re-election.)Still, those early fights established Kirk as a powerful conduit for the base's frustration — a figure lawmakers worried could unleash real political heat."If Charlie had not gotten the word to people that, 'hey, we're all in on this,' you would have had a lot more elected officials gone wobbly," Bannon, another enforcer, told Axios of key confirmation fights this year.Zoom out: Kirk derived his power from his close proximity to Trump.He founded Turning Point USA in 2012 at age 18 and built it into a youth-organizing juggernaut — registering voters in swing states and staging campus events nationwide, like the one in Utah disrupted by his assassination.That work connected him to major donors and ultimately to Trump's inner circle. He even joined the personnel vetting process after Trump's November victory, playing what Bannon described as an "incalculable" role in staffing decisions.Kirk parlayed that proximity into a successful media career, with his eponymous podcast frequently nearing the top of the charts on Spotify and Apple.That audience, grassroots connection and implicit Trump endorsement made it difficult fo rpower brokers to ignore the demands of Kirk and his legion of followers.What they're saying: "It's enormous that you can have somebody on the outside that can mobilize people in the way that he could," said Sean Spicer, Trump's first White House press secretary in 2017."It's one thing to go on a podcast or on a radio show and issue a call to action. It's another thing to have all the other tools at your disposal that he did," Spicer added, citing TPUSA's massive organizing machine.The bottom line: Movement insiders say few in MAGA can replicate Kirk's unique blend of skills, but they hope his assassination will be a galvanizing force that ultimately leads to someone filling his shoes."Charlie is one of one. Charlie is irreplaceable, and the reason he's irreplaceable is because he was a five-tool player," said prominent Trumpworld operative and Kirk friend Andy Surabian."There might not be somebody who has all those tools today, but I am convinced that Charlie has inspired a generation of young conservatives who down the line could put all those tools together," Surabian said.

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