Tucker Carlson took the stage at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service and delivered a speech that people will be talking about for a long time. While many speakers focused on Kirk’s political legacy, Carlson zeroed in on what he believed was Kirk’s true mission…spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
NBC News summarized his remarks bluntly: Carlson described Kirk as a “Christian evangelist” who was “bringing the Gospel to the country” and “doing the thing that the people in charge hate most, which is calling for them to repent.” It wasn’t just a eulogy; it was a sermon. Carlson wasn’t interested in safe, polite remembrance. He wanted to shake the crowd awake with the same urgency Kirk himself carried.
.@TuckerCarlson: “Charlie believed… the only real solution is Jesus… what Charlie was really saying, is that change begins, the only change that matters, when we repent of OUR sins.” pic.twitter.com/hTpl3g5EOK
— Real America's Voice (RAV) (@RealAmVoice) September 21, 2025
At one point, Carlson reminded the audience that politics, while important, isn’t the ultimate solution. “And Charlie was a political person who was deeply interested in coalition building and getting the right people in office, because he knew that vast improvements are possible politically,” Carlson said. “But he also knew that politics is not the final answer. It can’t answer the deepest questions. Actually, the only real solution is Jesus.”
That line hit like a thunderclap. In an era where most public figures dance around faith, Carlson leaned into it with both feet. He spoke about repentance—not as a slogan, but as a necessity. Before you can examine the sins of others, he argued, you’ve got to reckon with your own. It was raw, it was biblical, and it was exactly the kind of message Kirk himself would’ve loved.
Carlson’s tribute was also striking in how it fit the larger tone of the memorial. Many speakers highlighted Kirk’s fierce faith, painting him not just as a political organizer but as a modern evangelist. Carlson built on that theme, casting Kirk as someone whose work infuriated elites precisely because it demanded repentance.
The crowd responded with rapt attention. There weren’t applause lines or partisan zingers, it wasn’t that kind of speech. Instead, Carlson’s words landed with the weight of conviction.
In the end, his message was simple but profound: politics can shape laws, but only Jesus can change hearts. For a memorial service honoring a man who spent his life fighting for both faith and country, Carlson’s speech may have been the most fitting tribute of all.
Why in the hell are we electing Muslims into congress. They do not put the United States first. Any congress person must put the US first or they cannot be in congress. Rashida Tlaib and Illan Omar both need to go away and GTFO of our country and take AOC and Jassmine Crockoshit with them.