Politics

Trump’s Niece Blames the President for Charlie Kirk’s Murder

DIVISIVE RHETORIC

“The fire was started by the Republicans,” Mary L. Trump said.

Donald Trump and Mary Trump
Matthew Horwood/Mandel Ngan/Getty Images

President Donald Trump’s niece is calling out her uncle, saying he bears some of the blame for the murder of right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk.

After a shooter assassinated Kirk, 31, at a Utah university Wednesday, Trump called him a “martyr” and said the “radical left” was spreading rhetoric “directly responsible for the terrorism that we’re seeing in our country today” in an Oval Office address.

“My administration will find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity and other political violence,” he declared.

ADVERTISEMENT

But Mary L. Trump said her uncle “should start with himself.”

U.S. right-wing activist and commentator Charlie Kirk appears at a Utah Valley University speaking event in Orem, Utah, U.S. September 10, 2025. Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune via REUTERS.     NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
A gunman fired a single shot at Charlie Kirk during an event at a Utah college Wednesday, killing the 31-year-old right-wing commentator. Trent Nelson/REUTERS

“Political violence and the rhetoric that drives it are almost entirely on the side of the Republican Party, and no person is more responsible for it than Donald Trump,” Mary, 60, wrote Thursday in her The Good in Us Substack.

“We have arrived here in large part because this country has been purposefully and maliciously divided against itself because of the rhetoric coming from Donald Trump and the Republican Party.”

When reached for comment, White House Deputy Press Secretary Abigail Jackson said, “These are disgusting comments‚” and asked the Daily Beast to include an excerpt from Trump’s remarks on Kirk’s murder.

“Tonight, I ask all Americans to commit themselves to the American values for which Charlie Kirk lived and died,” the 79-year-old president said Wednesday evening. “The values of free speech, citizenship, the rule of law, and the patriotic devotion and love of God. Charlie was the best of America, and the monster who attacked him was attacking our whole country. An assassin tried to silence him with a bullet, but he failed because together we will ensure that his voice, his message and his legacy will live on for countless generations to come.”

Mary, a longtime critic of the president, wrote that he “almost single-handedly created the conditions in which his grievance, his vengeance, and his cruelty extend to anybody that supports him.”

nd niece to President of the United States Donald Trump, poses for a photograph at Hay Festival on May 26, 2025 in Hay-on-Wye, Wales. The annual festival of literature and the arts returns to Hay-on-Wye. Peter Florence devised the popular British culture festival along with his parents, Norman and Rhoda in 1988 and was described by Bill Clinton in 2001 as "The Woodstock of the mind". (Photo by Matthew Horwood/Getty Images)
Mary L. Trump, a psychologist and writer, has long been critical of her uncle. Matthew Horwood/Getty Images

She pointed to the deadly Jan. 6 riot, in which Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol and attacked police officers, noting Trump’s blanket pardon of roughly 1,600 rioters: “He has incited violence against his perceived political enemies as well as against his own government and then pardoned those who committed it on his behalf. This is not a ‘both sides issue.’”

Mary, whose father was Trump’s older brother, Fred Jr., claimed, “The right does not condemn political violence, at least when it’s wielded against their perceived political enemies. In fact, they celebrate it.”

She cited “positively gleeful” reactions to the 2022 attack on Paul Pelosi, the husband of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Trump joked about the assault, in which an attacker fractured Paul’s skull with a hammer, during a state party convention in 2023, saying, “We’ll stand up to crazy Nancy Pelosi, who ruined San Francisco—how’s her husband doing, anybody know?”

Mary, a psychologist and writer, condemned Kirk’s assassination and said her argument that Trump drives political violence “does not mean rejoicing in what happened to Charlie Kirk.”

Charlie Kirk, Erika Frantzve
Charlie Kirk leaves behind his wife, Erika Lane Kirk, 36, and their two young children. Facebook/Erika Frantvze Kirk

The search for Kirk’s killer is still ongoing, and the FBI has released security camera photos of a “person of interest.” Authorities have not officially identified a motive for the killing.

However, Trump and other right-wing figures have cast Kirk’s murder as a sign that the country’s “left” is responsible for pushing dangerous political rhetoric.

Following the shooting, tech billionaire Elon Musk wrote on X, “The Left is the party of murder.”

Mary argued those messages are “designed to pour gasoline on the already raging fire,” and added, “The fire was started by the Republicans.”

Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.