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Klarna Climbs 15% in Trading Debut After $1.37 Billion IPO

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Klarna signage during the company's IPO at the New York Stock Exchange on Sept. 10.
Klarna signage during the company’s IPO at the New York Stock Exchange on Sept. 10.

Klarna Group Plc rose 15% in its trading debut after the company and some of its backers raised $1.37 billion in an initial public offering that signals the market for new listings has room to run.

The financial services company’s shares, which rose as much as 43% Wednesday, closed at $45.82 each in New York, above the IPO price of $40 apiece. The double-digit oversubscribed offering priced on Tuesday above the marketed range, and about half of the prospective investors placing orders were left empty handed.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The closing price gives the company a market value of more than $17 billion, based on the outstanding shares. Though stock options and warrants add a bit to that valuation, it’s a steep drop from the $45.6 billion figure reached in 2021, at the height of the Covid 19-fueled online shopping bonanza.

A private funding round the following year sent the valuation plunging to $6.7 billion, as a cocktail of inflation and higher interest rates put pressure on fintech business models around the world, including Klarna’s position as a provider of so-called buy-now, pay-later financing.

To Klarna Chief Executive Officer Sebastian Siemiatkowski, the IPO cements the evolution of Klarna’s business beyond its roots in buy-now, pay-later. The firm, which rose to prominence during the pandemic-era jump in e-commerce, has more recently been making a push into offering other banking products like savings, checking accounts and credit cards.

WATCH: Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski says the company has decades of growth ahead and discusses the current competitive and regulatory environment.Source: Bloomberg
WATCH: Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski says the company has decades of growth ahead and discusses the current competitive and regulatory environment.Source: Bloomberg

“Investors finally were asking very few questions about buy now, pay later, which was very nice to see the message and the success of Klarna coming across,” Siemiatkowski said in an interview. “That this isn’t just buy now, pay later. That we offer all types of payment methods and that we offer the card and all types of retail, banking, financial services.”

Founded in Stockholm, the company has been expanding its offering of its “fair financing” product, which allows customers to pay off larger-ticket items over a longer period of time. While that’s provided a boon in net interest income, the push has also weighed on results because Klarna is required to book larger provisions for potential credit losses on these longer-term loans.

For now, such loans amount to about 2% of Klarna’s total transactions, an earlier filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission showed. The company expects that share to grow after the number of merchants offering the fair financing loans doubled in the last two years.

Prince Harry visits Ukraine to support those injured in war

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Prince Harry has made a surprise visit to Kyiv, after an invitation by an organisation that supports Ukrainians with life-changing injuries caused by the war.

The Duke of Sussex said he wanted to do “everything possible” to help the recovery of injured military personnel.

He arrived by train on Friday morning and is understood to have a busy schedule for the day, but no official details can be expected until this evening.

The Guardian newspaper reports that he will outline new plans to help rehabilitate the wounded during the trip.

Superhumans, which helps provide those injured with prosthetic limbs and rehabilitation, confirmed to the BBC that it invited Prince Harry to Ukraine.

He visited a centre run by the organisation in Lviv in April, but this is his first visit to the capital.

There are tens of thousands of soldiers and civilians with amputations as a result of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine – numbers vary, as Ukraine doesn’t give precise statistics on military casualties.

Ahead of Friday’s visit, the prince told the Guardian: “We cannot stop the war but what we can do is do everything we can to help the recovery process.”

“We can continue to humanise the people involved in this war and what they are going through.”

The paper reports Prince Harry is joined by a team from his Invictus Games Foundation – which he launched in 2014 for wounded veterans to compete in sports events.

A team from Ukraine was given special permission to compete in the games by President Zelensky in 2022, just months after the war began.

During the opening ceremony, the prince said the world was “united” with the country.

Friday’s visit comes after the Sussex’s charitable foundation Archewell said on Wednesday that it had donated $500,000 (£369,000) to projects supporting injured children from Ukraine and Gaza.

It said the grants would be used to help the World Health Organization with medical evacuations, and to fund work developing prosthetics for young people.

Other members of the Royal Family have expressed support for Ukraine since the start of the war more than three years ago.

The King welcomed Zelensky to his Sandringham estate in Norfolk in March, having previously said the country had faced “indescribable aggression” from Russia.

The Prince of Wales, Harry’s brother, met Ukrainian refugees during a two-day visit to Estonia in March – where he said their resilience was “amazing”.

His trip to Ukraine comes after he met his father King Charles in London on Wednesday, their first face-to-face meeting since February 2024.

Qatar leans on Trump to counter 'unhinged' Netanyahu

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Related Video: Trump, World Leaders REACT To Israeli Strike in Doha; Will Qatar RESPOND? | SUNRISE (Aired Sept. 10, 2025)

The U.S. and Qatar are reassessing their security partnership in an effort to deter a future Israeli strike, a senior official told The Hill, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vows to hit the Persian Gulf country again if Hamas officials are not expelled. 

In an interview with The Hill, Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesperson Majed al-Ansari raged against Netanyahu as an “unhinged, narcissistic leader” and said Qatar is only looking to grow its security partnership with the U.S. in response to Tuesday’s strike targeting Hamas leaders in Doha. 

Al-Ansari, who is also an adviser to Qatar’s prime minister, welcomed President Trump’s “condemnation and determination” to deter a future Israeli attack, speaking via Zoom from Doha.

“I think the whole world has a lot of cards it hasn’t played with Netanyahu, and I think there was a lot of reluctance internationally, including in the U.S., to take a lot of action in the hope that Prime Minister Netanyahu will sign a deal, will cease fire and will get his hostages out through diplomatic means,” al-Ansari said. 

Qatar is in high-level discussions with the U.S. to reassess its security partnership, al-Ansari said, adding that it “will take some time” because it had never before considered Israel as a direct threat.  

“Now, the gravest concern that we have is being attacked by Israel, which is something that was never the case in Qatar in all of its history,” he said. 

A major escalation

At 3:46 p.m. on Sept. 9, explosions rocked a residential neighborhood in Doha after Israel launched strikes targeting senior Hamas political officials. 

Trump said he was alerted by the U.S. military, which tracked Israeli fighter jets heading toward the Persian Gulf. By the time Trump learned of Israel’s plans to strike Doha and then moved to notify the Qataris, explosions were underway, Qatari officials said.

“This is an attack orchestrated by a megalomaniac who is leading a radical government in Israel. It has nothing to do with the United States,” al-Ansari said. 

The explosions lasted for less than five minutes, al-Ansari said, and in that time, six people were killed — five Hamas members and a Qatari security official — and at least three others were wounded.

The strikes marked a major escalation of Israel’s war against Hamas and introduced a new level of volatility in a region fraught with conflict. 

Qatar has not yet committed to expelling any remaining Hamas officials in the country. Trump expressed frustration with Netanyahu over the strike but has not signaled any punitive measures. 

Qatar said it has the right to retaliate against Israel, but al-Ansari said they are pursuing legal avenues at the moment through international bodies. On Thursday, the United Nations Security Council condemned strikes on Qatar but did not name Israel in its statement. The U.S. often vetoes resolutions directly criticizing Israel. 

Investigations are ongoing to determine more details of Israel’s attack. Al-Ansari said if airplanes were used, they eluded Qatar’s radar systems, “which are very advanced, and the whole region depends on the radar system in Qatar for monitoring such activity.”

“We know that it was an aerial attack, and the fact that our radar could not find the airplanes, catch the airplanes in the air, would tell us that they have used certain airplanes that are not detectable by the radar system,” he said.

A trusted broker

Doha serves as one of the main venues for indirect talks between Israel and Hamas over efforts to secure the release of hostages kidnapped on Oct. 7, 2023, and a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. 

Hamas said its chief, Khalil al-Hayya, survived the attack, and Netanyahu has vowed further attacks against any country that “harbors terrorists.” 

Hamas opened a political office in Doha in 2012 at the request of the U.S. and with Israel’s approval, Qatari officials have said, as a way to keep lines of communication open. 

Qatar has developed a reputation as a trusted broker in resolving high-stakes negotiations. It was the venue for U.S. talks with the Taliban over America’s exit from the country and has helped free U.S. citizens detained abroad. 

Al-Ansari said the Gaza ceasefire talks are one of “the most difficult mediations” Qatar has participated in, and he said “extreme pressure” was being applied on a renewed U.S. effort to get to a deal, with Hamas expected to issue a reply on Sept. 12. 

“Obviously, I can’t now say what that answer would have been,” he said. 

A ceasefire and hostage release could have saved the lives of nearly 20 people who are being held hostage by Hamas and returned the bodies of 28 others. A truce would have provided relief for millions of Palestinians suffering under famine-like conditions and staved off a major Israeli offensive into their capital city, where 1 million residents are being told to evacuate.

“It is very clear that Prime Minister Netanyahu has made sure that he would kill any chance of talks continuing or happening,” al-Ansari said. 

“That said, we will not be deterred from finding an end to the war.”

Republicans divided

While Qatar’s relationship with Hamas has been the subject of scrutiny on Capitol Hill, former President Biden designated Qatar as a major non-NATO ally in 2022. It hosts America’s largest military presence at Al Udeid Air Base. 

In May, Trump stopped in Qatar during his trip to the Persian Gulf, celebrating a $1.2 trillion economic commitment and accepting a $400 million luxury Boeing jumbo jet as a temporary replacement for Air Force One. 

Some senior Republicans have broken with the president’s criticism of Israel’s strike, putting their support behind Netanyahu.

“I don’t think we told Pakistan before we took out [Osama] Bin Laden,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), referring to the mastermind of the Taliban’s attacks against the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001. 

Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said “Israel deserves to be able to take out Hamas.”

And Sen. James Risch (R-Idaho), chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, likened Israel’s determination to eliminate Hamas as equal to the U.S. fight against the Nazis in World War II. 

“I would say, that if you’re a leader of Hamas and had anything to do with the invasion of Israel, it is a very, very dangerous position to be in,” he said. 

Al-Ansari pushed back and said those senators should “look into the facts and not be blinded by the smoke screen that Netanyahu offers.” 

“This is an attack on a sovereign state, on a residential neighborhood with six schools, a number of nurseries and residents who are all civilian,” he said, noting American students are also enrolled in schools nearby. 

“This is an attack that happened behind the United States. If your priority is the national security of the United States, is the foreign policy of the United States and the international standing of the United States, then you should question when your allies do things behind your back and attack sovereign countries where your army, your people, more than 10,000 servicemen and women operate.” 

While Trump has largely demonstrated steadfastness with Israel, most notably joining strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities in June, the president has shown frustration with Netanyahu at times. 

The failure to end the war between Israel and Hamas has delayed Trump’s goal of expanding the Abraham Accords, a crowning achievement of his first administration that brokered ties between Israel, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates.

Israel’s strikes on Qatar risk weakening the accords, al-Ansari said, accusing Netanyahu of pursuing regional hegemony over regional integration. He said that will be a subject of talks Monday in Doha of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

“That will bring together all the leaders of the Arab and Muslim world to discuss how to deal with the greatest threat to international peace and security, Benjamin Netanyahu, and how to do that collectively.”

Nationwide car insurance review 2025: 3.9 out of 5 stars

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Nationwide car insurance review 2025: 3.9 out of 5 stars

UK economy saw zero growth in July

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The UK economy failed to grow in July, according to the latest official figures.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the economy saw zero growth in the month, following a 0.4% expansion in June.

The government is under mounting pressure to deliver on its key priority of boosting economic growth as the next Budget is coming up.

Over the three months to the end of July, the economy grew by 0.2% compared with the previous three months, the ONS said.

The UK’s statistics body said the service sector performed well, helped by the health sector, computer programming and office support services.

However, this was offset by a weak performance in the manufacturing sector.

“The falls in production were driven by broad-based weakness across manufacturing industries,” she added.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves will outline the government’s tax and spending plans on 26 November with increasing speculation she will have to raise taxes to meet her self-imposed fiscal rules.

Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said the “weak start to the third quarter [is] a sign of things to come”.

“Economic activity is expected to slow in the second half of the year as the temporary factors which pushed up growth in the first half of 2025 begin to fade,” she said.

“Additionally, the later date of the Autumn Budget could prolong some uncertainties for businesses, delaying investment decisions and acting as a drag on growth until more clarity emerges.”

Responding to the latest growth figures, a Treasury spokesperson said: “We know there’s more to do to boost growth because whilst our economy isn’t broken, it does feel stuck.

“That’s the result of years of underinvestment, which we’re determined to reverse through our plan for change.

Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said: “Any economic growth is welcome – but this government is distracted from the problems the country is facing.

“While the government lurch from one scandal to another, borrowing costs recently hit a 27-year high – a damning vote of no confidence in Labour that makes painful tax rises all but certain.”

Appeals panel allows Trump admin to strip Medicaid funds from Planned Parenthood

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A federal appeals court Thursday cleared the way for the Trump administration to enforce a provision of the new tax cut and spending law that will cut off Medicaid funding from some Planned Parenthood clinics. 

The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals put on hold a preliminary nationwide injunction issued in July by a lower-court judge that blocked the Trump administration from cutting funding to all Planned Parenthood affiliates. 

The lawsuit contests a provision in the new law that imposes a one-year ban on state Medicaid payments to health care nonprofits that also offer abortions and received more than $800,000 in federal funding in 2023.   

Taxpayer money is already prohibited from covering most abortions.  

Instead, the law cuts reimbursement for other health services provided by Planned Parenthood and other health centers, such as cancer screenings and treatment for sexually transmitted infections.  

Although Planned Parenthood is not specifically named in the statute, which went into effect July 4, Planned Parenthood leaders said their organization was deliberately targeted. But at least one major family provider in Maine said they will also be impacted and sued the administration. 

In the lower court’s ruling, Judge Indira Talwani wrote the law likely violates the Constitution’s “bill of attainder clause,” which prohibits Congress and state legislatures from imposing punishments on individuals or specific entities without trial. 

Talwani was appointed by former President Obama. All three judges on the appeals panel were appointed by former President Biden. 

In its motion for a stay on Talwani’s order, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) called her logic “flimsy” and argued the Supreme Court has an extremely high standard for invalidating laws under the bill of attainder clause 

“Halting federal subsidies bears no resemblance to the punishments—including death, banishment, and imprisonment—previously understood as implicating the clause,” HHS wrote.   

In addition, Justice Department attorneys argued, “the elected Branches determined that taxpayer funds should not be used to subsidize certain entities that practice abortion—conduct that many Americans find morally abhorrent.” 

Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) said the decision puts as many as 200 health centers at risk of closure, and blocks more than 1.1 million patients from using their Medicaid insurance at Planned Parenthood health centers. 

“With this decision, patients and providers are in limbo … all because the Trump administration and its backers want to attack Planned Parenthood and shut down health centers,” PPFA President and CEO Alexis McGill Johnson said in a statement. “This is a blow, but the fight isn’t over.” 

Bank of America Sticks With DELL After CFO Transition

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Dell Technologies Inc. (NYSE:DELL) is one of the  Hot AI Stocks to Keep on Your RadarOn September 9, Bank of America reiterated the stock as “Buy” and said it’s sticking with Dell after the company announced a transition to a new CFO on Monday.

The company  announced that Chief Financial Officer Yvonne McGill will step down from her role effective September 9, 2025. David Kennedy was named as the interim CFO, effective the same date.

A business executive in a modern skyscraper office, overlooking the panoramic city skyline.

According to Jeff Clarke, Vice Chairman and COO, Kennedy brings 27 years of experience at Dell and “is well suited to provide immediate leadership for our finance team and the company.” His appointment comes at a time when Dell continues to expand its AI business operations.

“Our Buy rating is based on broad product portfolio, upside from AI, growth faster than the market, continuing share gains, and opportunity to grow margins over the next several years on higher mix of storage and mix shift to premium configurations in PCs and servers, which offset risks including a slow global economy, and high financial leverage.” -BofA

Dell Technologies Inc. (NYSE:DELL) provides IT solutions, including servers, storage, networking, and personal computing devices, to businesses and consumers worldwide.

While we acknowledge the potential of DELL as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you’re looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

READ NEXT: 10 AI Stocks Gaining Attention on Wall Street and 10 Exciting AI Stocks to Watch Right Now

Disclosure: None.

The Ayrshire wedding crasher mystery solved after four years

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Jonathan GeddesBBC Glasgow and West reporter

Belvedere Images A happy bride and groom walking back up the aisle after their wedding, with beaming smiles on their faces. Many of the guests are applauding them. Andrew Hillhouse can be seen in the background as one of the attendees, with a red ring overlain on the image to draw the eye to him.Belvedere Images

Michelle and John Wylie were bemused for years as to the identity of a stranger at their wedding

Michelle and John Wylie had a blissful November wedding four years ago at a boutique hotel on the South Ayrshire coast, surrounded by friends, loved ones – and one complete stranger.

The couple noticed the mystery wedding crasher only when they received photos of their big day – a tall man in a dark suit, with a noticeable look of puzzlement on his face.

They quizzed relatives, friends and staff at the venue, even asking the wedding photographer about the guest. No-one could provide any answers.

But now, after an internet sleuth joined the search, the mystery man has finally been identified.

Andrew Hillhouse, who was supposed to be a guest at another wedding two miles away, told BBC Scotland News he only realised he was at the wrong venue when the bride walked down the aisle.

Michelle and John were married on 20 November 2021 at the Carlton Hotel in Prestwick, surrounded by family and friends – or so they thought.

“It wasn’t until I got the first few photos back from the photographer and me and my husband were looking at them that we went ‘who’s that?’,” recalls Michelle, who lives in Kilmarnock.

“We started asking our parents first of all, then going through my aunties and the rest of the family, then my friends. Absolutely no-one knew who he was.

“Then we got on to the Carlton Hotel if they had an idea, but nope. We wondered if this was someone who had been helping bring the register down, but not a single person knew who he was.”

Belvedere Images A young boy in a kilt and a girl holding flowers walk down the aisle at a wedding, watched by guestsBelvedere Images

Andrew (tall man on the right), shortly before he realised he was at the wrong wedding

A Facebook post by the bride did not provide any answers either, and as time passed trying to solve the mystery fell by the wayside.

However Michelle told the BBC it kept niggling away at the back of her mind.

“It would come into my head and I’d be like ‘someone must know who this guy is’. I said a few times to my husband ‘are you sure you don’t know this guy, is he maybe from your work?’

“We wondered if he was a mad stalker.”

Other theories included a new partner of the daughter of family friends or someone helping wedding photographer Steven Withers.

Then an appeal to content creator Dazza, asking him to share their pictures and attempt to track the wedding crasher down, finally revealed the man’s identity.

Michelle and Andrew sitting next to each other and smiling at the camera. She has blonde hair and is wearing a patterned top in different tones of brown and a silver necklace. He has short, dark hair and is wearing a brown shirt with a geometric diamond-shaped pattern.

Michelle and Andrew are now Facebook friends and recently met in person

On that same Saturday in November 2021 Andrew Hillhouse was running late for a wedding. With five minutes to spare, he pulled up at the venue he’d been told to go to, hurried in, and took his seat.

His partner David was to be among the bridal party, and Andrew was relieved to be there on time.

It was when the bridal party began walking down the aisle that a sinking feeling crept in.

“I assumed David was in another room with the bride so the music starts up, everyone turns around to look at the bride and the second I see her I’m like ‘oh no, that’s not Michaela, what’s going on here?’,” he says.

“But I was committed at that point, because you can’t walk out of a wedding in progress so I thought I better double down. I’m 6ft 2in and I’m taller than everyone else, so I was trying to hunch down a bit and get out the way.

“I was just sitting there thinking ‘please, let this be over with’.”

Andrew’s partner had given him completely the wrong venue – the wedding he was supposed to be attending was taking place at the Great Western Hotel in Ayr.

He only knew his partner and the bride to be, which is why he didn’t raise any eyebrows at not recognising anyone else in attendance.

“There was a piper playing outside, and all these well dressed people, so I thought I was in the right place.”

Once the ceremony ended, Andrew, who is from Troon, headed for the exit to phone David, only to find he couldn’t escape just yet.

“I make a beeline for the doors, and hear ‘can we get everyone together for a picture’ and I was just going ‘noooo’ inside.

“So you can see my big head in the back row, trying to get out the way.”

Belvedere Images A wedding ceremony, with the bride and groom facing each other and guests watching onBelvedere Images

The couple’s wedding was attended by friends, family and one panicking stranger

Andrew was finally able to get out, though he admittedly took a drink of cola on the way. He phoned his partner to ask where they were, and it was only then he realised how far away he’d been sent.

“He told me they were taking photos at the fountain, and I’m looking around going ‘where is this fountain?’ Eventually I asked where they were and he tells me they’re at the hotel in Ayr.”

He was then able to go the actual wedding he was planning to attend, where his mishap provided a fun tale for the other guests.

Andrew Hillhouse A man sitting by a washing machine with a drill in his hand, carrying out repairs. He is wearing a Sex Pistols shirt.Andrew Hillhouse

Andrew Hillhouse inadvertently crashed the Wylies wedding

Finally a friend sent him the social media appeal, and he was able to explain online why he was there four years ago.

Andrew’s explanation for his unintentional gate-crashing on Dazza’s social media post garnered more than 600 comments and over 29,000 likes.

It has also put him in touch with the bride Michelle – the pair are now Facebook friends and have since met in person to share a laugh about their unlikely connection.

“I could not stop laughing,” says Michelle.

“We can’t believe we’ve found out who he is after almost four years.”

“Michelle said I’d been haunting her for years,” Andrew adds.

“It was much easier to crash a wedding than I’d have thought – I was in and out like an assassin, even if I only got a bottle of cola for it all!”

Charlie Kirk's assassination a turning point for conservative movement

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In all the shock, grief and anger on the right over the killing of conservative powerhouse Charlie Kirk, there is a sense that this is — to borrow the moniker of the influential organization he founded — a turning point for the conservative movement.

Political violence, targeting both the left and the right, has been increasingly common. And there have been a lot of close calls, to include the attempted assassination of President Trump. But it’s been decades since a major national political figure of this stature was suddenly, gruesomely and publicly killed like this.

Kirk launched the careers of thousands of conservative activists and engaged countless more young people. His political operation was critical to Trump’s 2024 win. It was easy to picture him as a future Fox News host or even a Republican presidential nominee.

His death is already sparking comparisons on the right to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. 

“This one, I think, is going to change some things,” Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) told me on the House steps Wednesday, soon after Trump had announced Kirk was dead.

How so, I asked?

“I got to think about that. But things just aren’t the same,” Roy replied. 

He expressed concern about declining religious faith. 

“It was the secret sauce that bound us together, even through the hardest of times,” Roy said. “I’m trying to figure out how you bind us if we’ve got such a gap between us and our collective faith in God?”

There’s been widespread concern about the intensely divisive political climate putting those in the public eye in danger. Commentators and lawmakers are expressing fear that they could be targeted next. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told reporters he is “trying to turn the temperature down around here.”

But many grieving the loss of Kirk are in no mood to tone down or give an inch to ideological adversaries. They don’t want to both-sides the issue or acknowledge political violence in recent years targeted at Democrats, such as the killing of Minnesota state lawmakers or the attack on former Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) husband.

If anything, having Kirk taken away is heightening the angry retribution-seeking that has fueled the MAGA movement and its political successes.

“This is a War,” Turning Point Action Chief Operating Officer Tyler Bowyer posted on social platform X, later adding on “Bannon’s War Room”: “The anger you feel right now must turn into activism.”

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), who previously worked for Turning Point USA, posted: “We are not murdering people. Leftists are. We are re-living the 60s. The tides have turned. Examples need to be made. Their hate will be their downfall.”

Trump himself promised to flex his administration’s power to “find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity and to other political violence, including the organizations that fund it and support it.”

And like muscle memory, conservatives are highlighting comments that Matthew Dowd made about Kirk pushing “hate speech” on MSNBC (which then fired him); calling for firings of professors and others who celebrate or rationalize Kirk’s killing on social media; and decrying headlines in major outlets and stories that noted Kirk’s controversial views.

“Everyone responsible, everyone celebrating, everyone who encouraged this or fomented it in any way — I want them all held to account. They want us dead. They’re killing us. Now is not the time for kumbaya stuff. This is real,” posted The Daily Wire’s Matt Walsh.

Elected Democrats have just about universally condemned and decried Kirk’s killing.

“That is a good start, but they haven’t taken responsibility for the actions of their own party. They are the party of violence, the party of murder,” Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) told reporters today.

As of publication, the FBI had released a photo of a person of interest in the Kirk shooting. The Wall Street Journal reported internal law enforcement reports said ammunition in the high-powered rifle was engraved with transgender and antifascist ideology; other outlets caution the document had not been verified and did not match other summaries of evidence, and that such preliminary reports are often a mix of correct and incorrect information.

Mace, who has become known for her blunt anti-transgender politics and has talked about facing threats for it, is promising to “double down and be more vigilant than I’ve ever been.”

Some suggest the battle transcending the political, into the realm of the spiritual.

In a speech on the House floor, Rep. Bob Onder (R-Mo.) said: “There is no longer any middle ground. Some on the American left are undoubtedly well-meaning people but their ideology is pure evil.”

Kirk’s murder coming the week of the 24th anniversary of 9/11 is a reminder of the national anger that followed the terrorist attack — articulated best by country music legend Toby Keith: “We’ll put a boot in your ass, it’s the American way.”

Lawmakers, activists, commentators, and Republican operatives I’ve talked to over the last 24 hours all seem to think that Kirk’s killing is going to invigorate waves of young people.

With all this anger, to what ends will they be activated?

Kirk gave an interview to Brigham Tomco of the Deseret News three weeks ago for a profile that ran just days ago, and spoke about the instinct among young activists to “[tear] everything down.”

“My job every single day is actively trying to stop a revolution,” Kirk told Tomco. “This is where you have to try to point them towards ultimate purposes and towards getting back to the church, getting back to faith, getting married, having children.”

“That is the type of conservatism that I represent, and I’m trying to paint a picture of virtue of lifting people up, not just staying angry.”

I’ve often used the shorthand of activist or commentator to describe Kirk, but he was all that and so much more. He was a builder of the conservative movement and a giant within it.

He was well-read and articulate and did not run away from his views, no matter how objectionable those on the left found them. He happily engaged in debates with political adversaries, and he’s being credited for helping to shift young men toward the political right. Turning Point USA events became must-attend events on the conservative calendar. 

Countless politicians and commentators and activists counted him as a friend. Benny Johnson said that Kirk let his family stay at his house for months after they fled what he described as dangers in his Washington, D.C., neighborhood. 

Ashley St. Clair shared screenshots of text messages with encouragement she got from Kirk: “I know it’s tempting and you think the world is crashing, I understand. Focus on new positive content. Don’t be bitter. Smile more and keep producing.”

This is a special edition of The Movement, a newsletter looking at the influences and debates on the right in Washington. I’m Emily Brooks, House leadership reporter at The Hill. Subscribe here for regular weekly editions on Tuesday mornings.

If Charlie Kirk had an impact on your life, tell me about it here: ebrooks@thehill.com

WHAT I’M READING

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