Erika Kirk Issues Spiritual Battle Cry in Los Angeles — Slams Anti-ICE Protests as “Demonic”
- Capitol Times

- 18 hours ago
- 2 min read
LOS ANGELES — On the inaugural night of the Make Heaven Crowded tour — the nationwide faith and revival campaign organized by Turning Point USA Faith — Erika Kirk, widow of conservative icon Charlie Kirk, delivered a powerful and unapologetic address that electrified audiences and rattled the radical left.
Standing before a packed church crowd, Kirk didn’t just honor her late husband’s legacy — she called out the spiritual darkness she believes is driving the left’s latest protests. In remarks that are already reverberating across conservative circles, Kirk labeled recent anti-ICE demonstrations sweeping major cities as “demonic” — a bold characterization that cuts to the heart of the cultural war engulfing the nation.
“I think it’s demonic,” Kirk declared, rejecting the notion that violent and disruptive protests advance justice or righteousness. Instead, she framed the moment as a spiritual battle — one that America’s patriots must confront with prayer, faith, and conviction.
The Make Heaven Crowded tour is billed as a Christian revival on wheels, a spiritual response to what many conservatives view as a moral unraveling in this country. Attendees — inspired by Kirk’s resolve — described the event as a renewal of faith and national purpose in the spirit of her late husband’s fight for truth, freedom, and Judeo-Christian heritage.
Participants said the event wasn’t only about religion, but about reclaiming a nation under assault by anti-faith, anti-law, and anti-tradition elements. Many stressed the importance of bringing Christ back into public life, calling their presence a stand against the “division and darkness facing America today.”
Kirk launched the tour not long after the tragic loss of Charlie Kirk — a moment that shocked conservative America and galvanized millions of followers. The tour serves as both a tribute to his legacy and a call to arms for believers to stand firm in faith and defend their values.
Predictably, the event has drawn fury from the political left. Critics have seized on Kirk’s remarks and the lineup of speakers to paint the tour as divisive. But supporters see something far more important: a movement to restore spiritual sanity in a nation drifting away from its Christian foundation.
Undeterred, Kirk and Turning Point USA Faith insist this mission is bigger than politics. It is about awakening the Church, uniting believers, and reminding America that faith — not chaos — is the answer.
As the Make Heaven Crowded tour continues across the country, Kirk’s unapologetic message is igniting conservative resolve and sharpening the ideological clash defining America in 2026.





