Arnold Schwarzenegger is weighing in on the shocking assassination of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, offering both praise for the slain activist and a broader warning about the dangerous rise of political violence in America.
The actor and former California governor addressed Kirk’s death while speaking at a University of Southern California event on Monday. Sitting alongside USC’s interim president Beong-Soo Kim, Schwarzenegger said he was devastated when he learned that Kirk had been killed during a campus debate.
“I was very, very upset that someone’s life was taken because they have a different opinion,” Schwarzenegger said. “It’s just unbelievable. This was a great communicator, a great advocate for Republican causes. He had such a way of connecting with students, whether they agreed or disagreed with him.”
“Unbelievable” Stunned Arnold Schwarzenegger Reacts To Charlie Kirk’s Assassination, Blames Social Media: “He Was a Great Father”
Kirk, who was gunned down on September 10 while participating in his “Prove Me Wrong” debate tour at Utah Valley University, was rushed to the hospital but later pronounced dead. Prosecutors have since charged 22-year-old Tyler Robinson with aggravated murder and are pursuing the death penalty.
Schwarzenegger, reflecting on Kirk’s legacy, shifted the focus to the personal toll of the killing. “It’s a human being. A human life is gone. And he was a great father, a great husband. I was thinking about his children,” he said. “They will only be reading about him now, instead of him reading them bedtime stories.”
A Bigger Warning on Division
The former governor used the tragedy to spotlight what he sees as the forces fueling America’s political hostility. According to Schwarzenegger, the blame extends across the spectrum — from social media companies to mainstream media to the political parties themselves.
“We have to acknowledge that the cause of all of this is the social media companies that are dividing us, the mainstream media companies that are dividing us,” Schwarzenegger told the audience. “The political parties: the Democrats that are dividing us, the Republicans that are dividing us. We’re getting hit from so many different angles, and we have to be very careful that we don’t get closer to that cliff. Because when you fall down that cliff — down there, there is no democracy.”
A Call to Young People
Speaking directly to USC students, Schwarzenegger encouraged the next generation to resist the pull of polarization and instead reach across the aisle. “The people can turn this around,” he said, urging young Americans to engage with those who hold different views rather than shutting them out.
For Schwarzenegger, Kirk’s assassination wasn’t just an isolated tragedy. It was also a grim reminder of where unchecked division can lead — and a call to action before political disagreements escalate into something far worse.
