Utah Gov. Spencer Cox’s remarks on catching Charlie Kirk’s alleged killer: Full transcript

Gov. Spencer Cox (R-UT) spoke at a press conference with the FBI and local law enforcement officers on Friday, providing updates on the 33-hour manhunt and investigation into the assassination of conservative activist and Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk.

Following the announcement that law enforcement has a suspect, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, in custody for Kirk’s assassination, Cox spoke about the investigation, its effect on the country, and what Kirk may have wanted from it.

Full transcript

COX: Thank you again to our incredible law enforcement team who has worked so hard, Sheriff, I got a solid 90 minutes last night. So I’m probably the most well-rested person up here. Ladies [and] gentlemen, I get the microphone, so I hope you’ll permit me to just share a few more thoughts about where we are, and how we got here, and maybe a little bit of where we go from here.

I don’t want to get too preachy, but I think it’s important that we, with eyes wide open, understand what’s happening in our country today.

I’ve heard people say, “Well, why are we so invested in this? There’s violence happening all across our country, and violence is tragic everywhere, and every life taken is a child of God who deserves our love and respect and dignity.”

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This is, this is certainly about the tragic death, assassination, political assassination of Charlie Kirk.

But it is also much bigger than an attack on an individual.

It is an attack on all of us. It is an attack on the American experiment. It is an attack on our ideals.

This cuts to the very foundation of who we are, of who we have been, and who we could be in better times. Political violence is different than any other type of violence for lots of different reasons.

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One reason is that in the very act that Charlie championed of expression, that freedom of expression that is enshrined in our founding documents, in having his life taken in that very act, makes it more difficult for people to feel like they can share their ideas, that they can speak freely.

We will never be able to solve all the other problems, including the violence problems that people are worried about, if we can’t have a clash of ideas safely and securely, even especially those ideas with which you disagree.

That’s why this matters so much. Over the last 48 hours, I have been as angry as I have ever been, as sad as I have ever been, and it was, as anger pushed me to the brink, it was actually Charlie’s words that pulled me back.

I’d like to share some of those [words], and specifically, right now, if I could, I need to talk to the young people in our state, in my state, and all across the country.

As President [Donald] Trump reminded me, he said, “You know, who really loved Charlie? The youths.”

He’s right. Young people loved Charlie, and young people hated Charlie, and Charlie went into those places anyway, and these are the words that have helped me.

Charlie said, “When people stop talking, that’s when you get violence.” He said, “The weak can never forgive.

“Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong. The only way out of the labyrinth of suffering is to forgive, welcome without judgment, love without condition, forgive without limit.” He said, “Always forgive your enemies.”

Nothing annoys them so much. A few months ago — I referenced this last night — Charlie posted to social media, “When things are moving very fast and people are losing their minds, it’s important to stay grounded, turn off your phone, read scripture, spend time with friends, and remember internet fury is not real life.”

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“It’s going to be OK.”

He again said, “When you stop having a human connection with someone you disagree with, it becomes a lot easier to commit violence.”

He said, “What we, as a culture, have to get back to is being able to have a reasonable agreement, being able to have a reasonable agreement where violence is not an option.”

Now again, to my young friends out there, you are inheriting a country where politics feels like rage. It feels like rage is the only option.

But through those words, we have a reminder that we can choose a different path.

Your generation has an opportunity to build a culture that is very different than what we are suffering through right now, not by pretending differences don’t matter, but by embracing our differences and having those hard conversations.

I think we need more moral clarity right now. I hear all the time that words are violence — words are not violence.

Violence is violence, and there is one person responsible for what happened, and that person is now in custody and will be charged soon and will be held accountable.

And yet, all of us have an opportunity right now to do something different. I want to thank my fellow Utahns. You know this bad stuff happens, and for 33 hours, I was praying that, if this had to happen here, that it wouldn’t be one of us, that somebody drove from another state, somebody came from another country.

Sadly, that prayer was not answered the way I hoped for, just because I thought it would make it easier on us if we could just say, “Hey, we don’t do that here.” And indeed, Utah is a special place.

We lead the nation in charitable giving. We lead the nation in service every year. But it did happen here. It was one of us, but I want you to look at how Utahns reacted the last two nights. There was no rioting. There was no looting. There were no cars set on fire. There’s no violence. There were vigils and prayers and people coming together to share the humanity, and that, ladies and gentlemen, I believe, is the answer to this.

We can return violence with fire and violence. We can return hate with hate. And that’s the problem with political violence is it metastasizes because we can always point the finger at the other side, and at some point, we have to find an off-ramp — or it’s going to get much, much worse.

See, these are choices that we can make. History will dictate if this is a turning point for our country, but every single one of us gets to choose right now. If this is a turning point for us, we get to make decisions. We have our agency.

And I desperately call on every American, Republican, Democrat, liberal, progressive, conservative, MAGA, all of us, to please, please, please follow what Charlie taught me.

I’ll just conclude with words I share often from a friend and author, Yuval Levin, who was asked if he was optimistic about our country, and he said, “I’m not optimistic.” He said, “I hate optimism.”

Yeah, that sounds bad, but he said, “Optimism is a vice. It’s this idea that good things are just going to happen.”

He said, “In the history of the world, good things have never just happened.” He said, “I’m not optimistic, but I am hopeful, and hope is the virtue that sits between the vices of optimism and pessimism.”

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Hope is the idea that good things are going to happen because we can make them so. I still believe in our country, and I know Charlie Kirk believed in our country. I still believe that there is more good among us than evil, and I still believe that we can change the course of history.

I’m hopeful because Americans can make it so.

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