At the Turning Point USA’s Women Leadership Summit, Erika Kirk captivated the audience with her poised handling of a disruptive heckler aiming to unsettle her presentation. The event, held at the San Antonio Marriott Rivercenter, witnessed Kirk’s composed demeanor as she addressed the crowd about the importance of faith in God.
During her speech, an off-camera woman’s voice pierced the atmosphere, accusing Kirk of protecting pedophiles. Despite the interruption, Kirk, the 37-year-old CEO, initially showed a hint of displeasure but soon appeared slightly entertained by the unexpected outburst, returning seamlessly to her prepared remarks.
In the face of the heckling, Kirk imparted a thoughtful message, “It’s important to remember that happiness comes and goes — and I pray that you find it,” directly addressing the disruptor while maintaining her composure.
The audience responded with enthusiastic cheers and applause, affirming their support for Kirk. Amidst the clamor, voices from the crowd erupted with calls of “We love you, Erika!” underscoring their admiration for her grace under pressure.
“It’s important to remember that happiness comes and goes — and I pray that you find it,” she said to the heckler.
The audience responded with cheers and applause, with some members of the crowd shouting: “We love you, Erika!”
The widow took several more jabs at the heckler — who was removed from the crowd.
“That’s an important moment because that just shows duty to faithfulness gives life meaning, and we must pray for our enemies and those that do not feel like their life has meaning. And that’s a perfect example of that. A perfect example. You pray for your enemies. You pray for those that persecute you,” Kirk said.
“That’s not the enemy. We know who the real enemy is,” she continued, without elaborating.
Kirk spent her 17-minute speech in San Antonio reflecting on her late husband, Charlie Kirk, and the 14-year anniversary of Turning Point USA.
She slammed feminism, telling the crowd of women — who paid between $50 and $300 for the summit — that they should embrace conservative values of family and marriage.
“We weren’t created to be alone. Scripture reminds us that men and women were designed to depend on one another, to support one another, to build together. That is God’s design for us. At its core, feminism is a worldview that treats many of the things that make women uniquely women as obstacles. As obstacles to overcome, rather than divine gifts, to embrace,” Kirk spewed.
The annual summit was slated to continue through the weekend, despite the arrest of a man last week for issuing sick online threats to kill Kirk at the event.
Jacob Wenske, 26, allegedly teased that he knew “exactly where to bomb” the venue.
“I can’t wait to be the valet for her escort,” he allegedly wrote.
He was charged with two felony counts of making a terroristic threat, causing public fear.
