Trump Admin Faces Backlash Over Free Speech, Kimmel Ban

At their convention five years ago, President Donald Trump and his Republican Party rallied their supporters fervently against an idea they characterized as a rot on society: cancel culture.

Too many people, they argued one by one in prime-time speeches, were being publicly ostracized — in some cases losing their jobs — for exercising their constitutional right to free speech.

“To the voiceless, shamed, censored and canceled, my father will fight for you,” Eric Trump pledged then.

But the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who was among the speakers at that 2020 convention, seems to have rapidly shifted how Trump and other Republicans see the boundaries of free speech and the rules of engagement for a once-loathed cancel culture.

Previously a voice for the canceled, they are now the ones canceling.

The debate — feeding on rage and grief from a White House where many, including Vice President JD Vance, were close friends with Kirk — escalated Wednesday with the shelving of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” Disney-owned ABC pulled the late-night talk show hours after Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, threatened to “take action” against the company over Kimmel’s criticism of how Republicans reacted to Kirk’s death.

“The MAGA gang [is] desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said during his Monday monologue.

Tyler Robinson, who is accused of fatally shooting Kirk, came from a conservative family but, according to his mother, had “started to lean more to the left” politically over the last year, court documents said. Text messages from Robinson released by authorities said he targeted Kirk because he “had enough of his hatred.”

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