By Nick Catoggio
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
There’s a kind of leftist that would have you believe
that John F. Kennedy was, kinda sorta, murdered by the American right.
No
foolin’. The argument, such as it is, is that Dallas, Texas, was a hotbed
of crankish right-wing activism in November 1963 and that the political
“climate” in the city made lethal violence more likely. In this telling, the
fact that the president’s assassin was a communist who had once defected to the
Soviet Union is largely a detail.
I thought of that this week as some liberals went about
convincing themselves that Charlie Kirk’s alleged murderer was right-wing.
In fairness, there was real suspense about his motives
until Tuesday. Although Kirk’s own politics made it likely that his killer was
of the left, a faction of the far right vocally hated
him for not being more hostile to Jews and minorities. One of the slogans
that the assassin reportedly carved on his unfired cartridges (“if you read this,
you are gay lmao”) sounded like groyper trolling, not progressive
sloganeering. That was enough to justify not leaping to conclusions about his
ideological leanings.
But some liberals did leap—in the opposite direction. “In
fact, the alleged shooter was not someone on the left,” Heather
Cox Richardson wrote on Saturday. “The alleged killer, Tyler Robinson, is a
young white man from a Republican, gun enthusiast family, who appears to have
embraced the far right, disliking Kirk for being insufficiently radical.”
Richardson is a professional historian, not to mention the single
most popular politics author on Substack. That she would blithely assert as
fact a claim as unproven, dubious, tendentious, and inflammatory as the
killer was not someone on the left makes me reluctant to trust anything
else she’s written, professionally or otherwise.
We’ll see what the state of Utah can prove in court, but
the indictment
filed on Tuesday makes a strong case that the assassin was indeed someone on
the left, as expected. It cites his mother for the claim that “Robinson had
become more political and had started to lean more to the left—becoming more
pro-gay and trans-rights oriented.” In a text exchange with his
roommate/boyfriend, who was reportedly transitioning to being a woman, the
killer rationalized murdering Kirk by saying, “I had enough of his hatred. Some
hate can’t be negotiated out.”
For days, theories swirled among the commentariat that
the assassin would prove to be another internet-drenched “lost boy” whose
politics are inscrutable to everyone except pimply teen gamers and edgelords.
Unless the indictment omitted something important, though, the motive was
straightforward: Like practically every progressive in this country, he
abhorred Kirk’s condemnations of transgenderism. That’s legibly leftist.
Some on the left aren’t handling the
news well.
We’re really going to do the JFK thing again, huh?
Denial.
The most one can say about liberals doggedly refusing to
accept that Kirk’s killer is one of them is that it beats the alternative.
“This monster can’t possibly belong to my virtuous tribe”
is morally preferable to “I see myself and my tribe in this monster.” An
America where assassins are orphaned politically is salvageable. An America
where they’re embraced is not.
Two polls conducted before Tuesday’s indictment suggest
liberals are keen to orphan Kirk’s killer. One found
that 8 percent of Democrats believe him to be a fellow Democrat as opposed to
41 percent who believe he’s a Republican. (In reality, he’s registered with neither
party.) Another
saw 10 percent of Democrats say the assassin was motivated by left-wing beliefs
versus 33 percent who say he was motivated by right-wing ones.
Maybe leftists let their initial moral revulsion guide
their understanding of events and will reconcile themselves to the truth now
that allegations about the killer’s sympathies have been made, at least
preliminarily, in court. But the denial we’re seeing from some might not be a
psychological flinch; it could be an information problem of the sort with which
readers of this newsletter are familiar. And if it is, the share of liberals
who believe the killer was right-wing might grow rather than shrink.
“Propaganda doesn’t concern itself with what’s true, it
concerns itself with what’s useful,” I wrote last
year, describing how MAGA media does business. It’s useful to the left
in this moment to believe, and have other Americans believe, that Kirk’s
murderer was inspired by right-wing ideology, but it sure doesn’t seem to be
true. How they end up prioritizing between the two as more facts come out will
tell us something about how propagandistic they are relative to the average
Trumpist disinformation organ.
It’ll tell us some other things too.
For one, it’ll tell us how much they care about
discouraging violence in their own ranks. “Healthy political movements do not
baby their supporters by tying themselves into pretzels to explain away
uncomfortable facts,” Andrew
Egger declared today at The Bulwark, lamenting the “ostriching” that
some leftists are performing about the killer’s motives. If you want to deter
extremism by your own base, facing it squarely is a lot more effective than
lamely scapegoating your enemy. Imagine an Islamist group condemning a jihadist
terror attack—but blaming it on Israel. Is that a serious attempt to deter
radicalism by one’s fellow travelers?
Arguably, it’s a permission slip for more violence. After
all, if the enemy can be made to take the blame when its own people are
slaughtered, what’s the downside in slaughtering more?
Demoralization.
Scapegoating the right for Kirk’s murder is foolish for
another reason, as it implies that White House harassment of left-wing groups
might be justified if the killer’s left-wing sympathies can be established.
“Robinson seems to have despised Kirk on progressive grounds, not ‘groyper’
ones,” Vox senior correspondent Eric Levitz noted
on Tuesday. “There is no point in lying about this. The case against Trump’s
crackdown on progressive groups does not hinge on this killer’s motives. To dig
in on the groyper theory is to suggest that it does.”
Leftists have better hills to die on. They should concede
that the trans cause doesn’t justify murder while demanding that that cause’s
justness not be judged by one lunatic’s actions. They might point out that the
killer’s transgender lover was apparently horrified by what he did and provided
the evidence that’ll probably lead to a conviction and a death sentence. Or
they could argue, rightly, that public disgust at Kirk’s murder doesn’t entitle
Donald Trump to go
on a civic rampage aimed at protected speech.
To fight instead on the hill of denialism, pretending
that the shooter didn’t believe the things he evidently believed, is to invite
Americans to conclude that the left isn’t serious about restraining certain
forms of violence, a potent
recurring Trump narrative.
It would also be hugely demoralizing to the dozens of us
left in the United States who believe the point of politics shouldn’t be to
protect one’s supporters from ever having to confront an intolerable truth, as
has been the case on the right for the past 10 years.
That’s what has Egger so disgusted, I’m sure. “Instead of
allowing [the disgrace of January 6] to shape and recolor their views of their
own movement,” he writes,
“Republicans retreated frantically into comforting and then increasingly
outlandish lies: that Donald Trump would be exiled, that it was a one-off, that
the real perpetrators had been Antifa insurgents, or, later, that
federal law enforcement had concocted the whole thing.” He—and I, and you—have
seen this movie before and we were hoping never to watch it again. The goal of
moving America past Trumpism is not to be governed by a different faction of
cranks committed to making excuses for their most degenerate allies.
Ten years of Trump has made right-wing populists so
addicted to having their prejudices confirmed, in fact, that some are skeptical
of the information in yesterday’s indictment even though “unhinged pro-trans
radical” would seem to be an ideal ideological chew toy for them. “I’m
particularly not buying those text messages, it just seems too stilted, too
much like a script,” Steve
Bannon complained. Other MAGA influencers
agreed. They’re spoiling for a pretext to harass lawful left-wing activist
groups but that’ll be hard to justify if the killer was an idiot kid who acted
alone. Their political needs require them to reject “the official story.” The
same apparently goes for leftist truthers like Heather Cox Richardson.
“A lot of you really need to sit down and think about how
easily you believed a huge, obvious pack of lies about this, in the face of
clear evidence to the contrary, just because you heard it a lot and found it
ideologically validating,” Will Stancil scolded
his fellow liberals on BlueSky after the indictment was published. “Barely
distinguishable from MAGA conspiracy nonsense.” That’s the sound of a man who
recognizes that the derangement caused by America’s appetite for political bespoke
realities won’t be solved by Donald Trump’s retirement. I understand his
despair.
Luigimania.
We arrive at a mystery: Why is the left so eager to
disclaim ideological kinship with Charlie Kirk’s murderer when it was in no
rush to do so with Luigi
Mangione?
A poll
taken after Mangione allegedly shot the CEO of UnitedHealthcare in cold blood
found 28 percent of self-identified liberals willing to admit that they
supported the murder. (Five percent of conservatives said the same.) “Violence
is never the answer, but people can be pushed only so far,” said Sen. Elizabeth
Warren at the time, sounding like a Muslim Brotherhood flack after a Hamas
bus bombing in Tel Aviv. “This is a warning that if you push people hard
enough, they lose faith in the ability of their government to make change, lose
faith in the ability of the people who are providing the health care to make
change, and start to take matters into their own hands in ways that will
ultimately be a threat to everyone.”
Neither she nor any other prominent Democrat has said
anything remotely as menacing as that this week. Kirk “pushed” his opponents
plenty on trans rights but no one in a position of influence is claiming it’s
understandable that his killer felt obliged to start shooting at him.
Maybe they’re drawing a distinction between speech and
action. Love him or hate him, Charlie Kirk was killed doing something that
practically everyone agrees Americans should have the right to do. There’s no
such agreement on the propriety of health insurance companies squeezing
customers on coverage.
There’s also obviously less political salience in
murdering a business executive than there is in murdering a nationally known
activist for a political party. Plenty of right-wingers harbor their own
grievances over maddening experiences with health insurance companies. Leftist
bloodlust at the expense of one of those companies won’t offend them the way
that bloodlust at the expense of one of their political heroes will.
To put that another way: No one feared that a
UnitedHealthcare employee might go rogue in a fit of grief and shoot a
left-wing activist in reprisal. Everyone fears a right-winger doing that
after Kirk’s murder. Turning down the temperature is more urgent.
There may also be a “Trump factor” in the left’s
reaction, although they’d be loath to admit it.
You can and should despise how the president abuses his
power to get his way but let’s
not pretend that it’s not effective. Between the many populist fanatics
who’d like him to
rule as a dictator and the many more cowards and opportunists unwilling to
cross him by speaking out, there isn’t much popular outrage left in America
anymore for his enemies to tap into when he starts behaving ruthlessly toward
them.
Leftists have watched him flagrantly
violate laws, watched him shake down law firms, corporations, and
universities, watched him bypass due process to blow
people up and to throw others into foreign gulags, and watched him send the
military into American streets. Now they’re watching him and his flunkies
babble about investigating left-wing “terrorist networks,”
whatever that means, and imagining what sort of draconian
new abuses that might produce before the midterms.
Best not to antagonize Trump about his good friend
Charlie Kirk under those circumstances, eh? Better to play this one a little
cooler than they did with Luigimania.
Right-wingers will luxuriate in the idea of their
opponents being cowed into respectful silence by a lawless president’s
belligerence, never mind that that’s the sort of nightmare scenario the First
Amendment was written to prevent. But, for the left, the moment calls for
strategic thinking: In addition to not tempting the devil by dancing on his
ally’s grave, what can they do to delegitimize the persecution campaign he’s
planning against them?
Well, they can go on insisting that the person who
murdered Charlie Kirk wasn’t a leftist at all, the available evidence
notwithstanding.
It would be a Trumpy tactic, ironically. The president’s
goal in lying as often as he does has always seemed less about persuading
everyone that he’s right than in persuading enough people that he’s
right as to leave undecideds believing the truth is unknowable and therefore
not worth fighting about. The “rigged election” nonsense was the supreme
triumph of that strategy. Most Americans don’t believe that the 2020 election
was stolen—but enough do that swing voters didn’t hold Trump’s incessant
propaganda to the contrary against him at the polls last fall. Who can say what
the truth is?
The “Robinson was right-wing” progressives might be
hoping to pull the same trick. Insist forcefully and persistently that Kirk’s
assassin wasn’t on the left and the White House’s harassment campaign against
left-wing groups may come to seem illegitimate and grow more unpopular. One
side says he was left-wing, the other says right-wing. Maybe his politics are
unknowable. Who can say?
It wouldn’t be true but it could be useful. And that’s
how our political factions prioritize, now more than ever.
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