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    Home»Money»The Fallout From Charlie Kirk’s Death Is Spilling Into the Workplace
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    The Fallout From Charlie Kirk’s Death Is Spilling Into the Workplace

    Press RoomBy Press RoomSeptember 14, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    In the days since Charlie Kirk’s death, some companies have been forced to navigate a delicate situation: employees sharing their personal views about the conservative activist in public.

    For employers, those remarks highlight the growing challenge of balancing free expression with corporate values and workplace harmony.

    Major corporations like Microsoft and Delta Air Lines are taking action against employees who have made social media posts critical of Kirk’s own views, or even ones celebrating his death, which could be considered a violation of company values.

    Kirk, an ally of President Donald Trump, advocated conservative beliefs on college campuses and was influential among young people on the right. However, many find his comments about immigrants, trans rights, and feminism intolerant and divisive.

    Here is how some companies are responding.

    Microsoft

    Microsoft shared an X post on Friday addressing negative remarks about Kirk made online by some of its employees.

    “We’re aware of the views expressed by a small subset of our employees regarding recent events,” the company said. “We take matters like this very seriously and we are currently reviewing each individual situation.”

    Microsoft said, “Comments celebrating violence against anyone are unacceptable and do not align with our values.”

    Microsoft’s statement came after Tesla CEO Elon Musk called out Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on X in response to an unverified claim that some employees at Blizzard, a video game company owned by Microsoft, had posted comments “trashing” Kirk.

    Office Depot

    The ODP Corporation, parent company of Office Depot, apologized to consumers on Friday after footage taken at a Michigan Office Depot gained attention on social media. The footage appeared to show an employee refusing to print a poster for a vigil associated with Kirk.

    “The behavior displayed by our associate is completely unacceptable and insensitive, violates our company policies, and does not reflect the values we uphold at Office Depot. On behalf of the Company, we sincerely apologize for this regrettable situation,” the company said in a press release.

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    The company said it fired the employee involved in the interaction.

    “We also launched an immediate internal review and, as a result, the associate involved is no longer with the organization,” the press release said. “We continue to aggressively investigate the matter and will take action where appropriate.”

    A spokesperson told Business Insider that Office Depot continues to “closely manage” its response to the interaction.

    Nasdaq

    On Friday, Nasdaq said it fired an employee for their remarks about Kirk because they violated company policy.

    “We are aware of social media posts by an employee regarding the shooting of Charlie Kirk that were a clear violation of our policy. Nasdaq has a zero-tolerance policy toward violence and any commentary that condones or celebrates violence,” the company said on X. “The employee in question has been terminated, effective immediately.”

    MSNBC

    Political analyst Matthew Dowd was widely attacked online after making remarks about Kirk during an appearance on MSNBC’s “Katy Tur Reports” on Wednesday.

    MSNBC president Rebecca Kutler called Dowd’s comments “insensitive” in an X post later that day.

    “During our breaking news coverage of the shooting of Charlie Kirk, Matthew Dowd made comments that were inappropriate, insensitive, and unacceptable,” the statement said. “We apologize for his statements, as has he. There is no place for violence in America, political or otherwise.”

    Dowd responded in a subsequent Substack article on Friday, confirming that MSNBC had fired him.

    “The Right Wing media mob ginned up, went after me on a plethora of platforms, and MSNBC reacted to that mob,” he wrote. “Even though most at MSNBC knew my words were being misconstrued, the timing of my words forgotten (remember I said this before anyone knew Kirk was a target), and that I apologized for any miscommunication on my part, I was terminated by the end of the day.”

    Comcast and Versant executives urged employees to “treat people with kindness” in a memo on Friday. Comcast is MSNBC’s parent company. Versant is an independent media company being spun off from Comcast and NBCUniversal that will eventually own MSNBC.

    “Regardless of whether you agreed with his political views, his words and actions underscore the urgency to maintain a respectful exchange of ideas — a principle we must champion,” the memo said.

    The memo added: “As employees, we ask you to embody our values in your work and communities. We should engage with respect, listen, and treat people with kindness.”

    Perkins Coie

    Perkins Coie, a law firm already at odds with the Trump administration, didn’t escape the fray either.

    The firm fired a lawyer whose social media posts about Kirk gained attention online, where commentators noted his place of work, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    “This is not who we are, and we have separated the individual from Perkins Coie,” the law firm told the outlet.

    The Carolina Panthers

    On Thursday, the Carolina Panthers addressed comments from one of its employees, writing on X, “The views expressed by our employees are their own and do not represent those of the Carolina Panthers.”

    “We do not condone violence of any kind. We are taking this matter very seriously and have accordingly addressed it with the individual,” the post said.

    A source told The Athletic that the organization fired a public relations employee over his remarks about Kirk.

    Delta Air Lines

    Delta Air Lines suspended an unknown number of employees over their social media posts about Kirk, a companywide memo viewed by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution showed.

    The memo said those employees are under investigation because the content “went well beyond healthy, respectful debate,” Delta CEO Ed Bastian wrote in the memo, according to the AJC.

    He added: “Violations of our social media policy can carry meaningful consequences, including termination.”

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates. Business Insider contacted all the companies mentioned in this story for comment.

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