The Australian, 13 September 2025
We Must Not Allow Charlie Kirk's Death To Become Our Reality
By The Hon. Josh Frydenberg
Read the article online at The Australian
Political violence is not new.
In the 1960s US President John F. Kennedy, his brother Robert F. Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King all died from an assassin's bullet.
But what is different today is the mainstreaming of political violence.
The growing belief in western liberal democracies that certain political ideas and political personalities pose such a threat that violence is justified.
The murder of Christian conservative Charlie Kirk appears to be the latest tragic example. It follows the most recent killing of the United Health Care CEO in New York and two Israeli Embassy staff in Washington.
In fact this violent frenzy was a trend Kirk himself had previously identified, citing a Network Contagion Research Institute survey in a post on X: "Assassination culture is spreading on the left. 48% of liberals say it would be at least somewhat justified to murder Elon Musk and 55% said the same about Donald Trump ".
But what is also deeply disturbing is that this toxic and dangerous political climate in the United States is manifesting itself here in Australia.
Kirk's death may be an international act but it has domestic implications. It's our wake up call.
Just look at the vitriol and the violence that has reared it's ugly head in Australia following the Hamas attack on October 7. It was previously unthinkable we could see such violent antisemitism in our 'lucky country'.
From the destruction of MP's offices to the firebombings of childcare centres, synagogues, businesses and Jewish homes these actions need to be seen as part of a single violent thread.
A thread that sees people deny debate, reject civility and embrace the most violent of means.
When we see spontaneous celebrations in Western Sydney of the brutal slaughter of 1200 innocents and people march in our streets labelling Jews Nazis and Zionists as terrorists while also calling for the globalisation of the intifada, all without sanction, we are inviting the kind of violence that we saw play out in the United States.
It is only a short step from explicitly calling for the death of Jews as was done by protestors recently on our own Harbour Bridge to actually carrying it out.
Yet our leaders fail to join the dots and understand the dangerous trajectory we are on.
Expelling the Iranian ambassador for his nefarious activities maybe necessary but it's not sufficient.
The real danger lies in the rapid radicalisation of our youth.
When an Australian with over 200,000 followers on social media posts hours after Kirk's death "Charlie Kirk was a piece of shit...I will waste no tears nor time on lamenting his demise." It's not only horribly offensive it's downright dangerous.
When pro Palestinian protests march on the National Gallery of Victoria and shut it down simply because one of its halls is being named after a generous Australian Jewish philanthropist again we are well down the slippery slope.
When the gates of Jewish schools are dubbed with "Jew Die" and Jewish university academics have their offices vandalised and Jewish students are harassed in class they are just further data points.
It's all part of a cocktail of hate that is consuming our society.
Hate that is being enabled by those who should know better but simply turn the other way.
How else could one explain the behaviour of a leading vice chancellor defend their student's public support for Hamas as simply an expression of academic freedom?
As the ASIO Director General Mike Burgess has warned words matter, and it's not long berore dangerous words become dangerous deeds.
Of course it's not just confined to the political left where the violence is occurring but on the far right too.
Nazi sympathisers gathering on the steps of Victoria's Parliament House and recently hijacking an otherwise peaceful demonstration are cases in point.
Unchallenged these groups will only grow in size capitalising on the vulnerable and their resentment with the status quo.
What we need is stronger action. We need leaders who see these issues as binary. We either are safe or we are not. We are either advancing social cohesion or we are not. No more on the one hand this and on the other hand that. The situation is too dangerous for equivocation. There can be no more tolerance for the intolerable.
When I interviewed the Prime Minister for my Sky documentary 'Never again: the fight against antisemitism' he lamented the pro Palestinian protesters that were camped outside his electorate office harassing his staff and preventing them from serving constituents.
I thought to myself you are the PM, if you won't do something about it what hope do the rest of us have?
Likewise when university leaders complained about the radical elements on campus setting up encampments and leaving students fearful for their safety I said to them 'well you're the vice chancellor do something.' After all it is they who are responsible for the running of the university and guaranteeing student safety.
In short we need leaders who don't just want the job but want to do the job. They have the powers they just the need the will to exercise them.
Charlie Kirk devoted himself to the battle of ideas and for that he tragically paid with his life.
It is the latest major warning to us all.
Australia must move quickly and more effectively counter the hot bed of hate in our own society before we experience the logical violent extension of that hate that has so sadly played out in the United States.
It's now up to our leaders here in Australia, political and civil, to ensure Charlie Kirk's death does not become our new reality.
Josh Frydenberg is the former Federal Treasurer of Australia and was named The Australian's 2024 'Australian of the year' for his fight against antisemitism.