Fresh controversy has erupted around Erika Kirk after Candace Owens accused the White House Military Office of helping push a viral emotional video in the aftermath of the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting. The allegation has already triggered fierce debate online, with critics questioning whether politics, media strategy, and public sympathy are becoming dangerously intertwined.At the center of the storm is a short clip showing Erika Kirk leaving the ballroom visibly shaken after the shooting while saying, “I just wanna go home.” The video spread rapidly across social media and quickly became one of the defining emotional moments tied to the tragedy.
Candace Owens claims White House pushed Erika Kirk video
Owens alleged on X and during her podcast that the White House Military Office circulated an internal e-mail shortly after the shooting, encouraging officials to amplify the clip online. According to her, the message described the footage as having the “strongest emotional-response asset associated with the incident.”Owens further claimed the e-mail referenced the clip’s growing viral reach and its ability to shape wider public narratives surrounding the shooting. She alleged the communication was mistakenly shared with the wrong internal groups before attempts were made to delete it.The conservative commentator openly questioned why Erika Kirk became such a central public figure in coverage of the incident.“So the question now is— why did the military so quickly prioritize making Erika Kirk the face of WHCD shooting?” Owens asked. “Is that normal emergency protocol or was this unnaturally preplanned?”As of now, no official evidence confirming the alleged e-mail has been publicly released, and authorities have not verified Owens’ claims.
Erika Kirk and Candace Owens feud keeps escalating
The latest accusations add another chapter to the increasingly public fallout between Owens and Erika Kirk following the assassination of Charlie Kirk. Over recent months, Owens has repeatedly questioned the handling of TPUSA leadership, media messaging, and the public image surrounding Kirk’s widow.Owens also hinted at what she described as an “unnatural alliance” between the White House and TPUSA.“That’s kind of been a focus of the White House,” Owens explained. “There is an unnatural alliance here between Turning Point USA and the White House. It’s too much. It’s feeling a bit squishy in here.”The tension between the two women briefly appeared to cool last December when Erika Kirk announced they would hold a private meeting to stop the public back-and-forth online. At the time, Kirk wrote that she hoped for a “productive conversation.”That truce clearly did not last.Now, with conspiracy theories, leaked e-mail allegations, and political suspicion dominating online discussions, the controversy surrounding Erika Kirk continues to grow far beyond the original tragedy itself.
