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The shockwaves from Charlie Kirk’s assassination on the first stop of Turning Point USA’s American Comeback Tour have not only left the conservative movement mourning its 31-year-old co-founder but also spotlighted the institutions and ideas he championed.
Among them is one of Turning Point USA’s most controversial projects: the School Board Watchlist, a platform designed to track school districts and governors whom the organization accuses of advancing what it calls “radical leftist agendas” in American education.Kirk, who co-founded Turning Point USA in 2012 at just 18 years old, built his reputation on campus activism and grassroots mobilization. Today, the non-profit claims to have a presence at more than 3,500 universities and high schools, calling itself the “largest Conservative student movement” in the United States.
Its mission, as stated on its website, is to “educate young people about the importance of limited government, free markets, and freedom.
”But beyond rallies and debates, it is TPUSA’s watchlists, including the Professor Watchlist (2016), Dean’s List, and most recently, the School Board Watchlist (2021), that have stirred some of the sharpest debates around free speech, academic independence, and the politicization of classrooms.
The origins: Turning Point USA and its mission
Charlie Kirk often described Turning Point USA as a vehicle to “reshape culture on college campuses.” Launched after Barack Obama’s re-election, the group recruited field representatives at schools across all 50 states, urging them to set up forums for right-wing discussions on the economy, race, religion, and national identity.TPUSA quickly gained backing from conservative donors and aligned itself with Tea Party activists, including co-founder Bill Montgomery, who famously convinced Kirk to skip university and devote himself to the cause.
By 2016, TPUSA had already launched the Professor Watchlist, a website that named academics accused of “discriminating against conservative students and advancing leftist propaganda.”The School Board Watchlist followed in 2021, expanding the strategy beyond higher education into America’s K–12 system.
Inside the School Board Watchlist
According to Turning Point USA’s website, the School Board Watchlist was created to “actively identify school districts across the country that are abusing their power to push Leftist, racist, and anti-American propaganda.”The platform publishes the names of school board members who, in its view, endorse what it describes as “anti-racist curricula” or impose mandates like mask-wearing during the COVID-19 pandemic. The site further claims:“America’s radical education system has taken a devastating toll on our children, and those impacts were only amplified during the COVID lockdowns. Parents began to see what their children were learning in the classroom and said, this doesn’t represent our family values.”TPUSA points to examples such as drag queen story hours, courses on transgender issues, and gender-neutral bathroom policies as evidence of what it considers an “anti-American agenda.” Supporters are urged to submit tips about “radical schools, universities, and professors,” attend local school board meetings, and sign up for weekly newsletters tracking these developments.In a promotional video featured on the website, Charlie Kirk himself described the project as part of TPUSA’s broader fight to “save America” by mobilizing parents and students against what he called a “radical leftist agenda.”
Supporters and critics
To its supporters, the School Board Watchlist represents a grassroots tool for holding educators accountable and amplifying parents’ concerns about curriculum and culture in schools. It has become part of TPUSA’s wider framing of education as a battleground for America’s values, echoing Kirk’s frequent calls to resist “woke indoctrination.”Critics, however, argue that such watchlists amount to public shaming campaigns that chill academic freedom and target school officials for political gain.
Civil liberties advocates warn that singling out teachers and board members by name can encourage harassment and deepen polarization at the local level.
Beyond Kirk: The future of the movement
Charlie Kirk’s death has left Turning Point USA without its most visible leader at a pivotal moment. In his tribute on Truth Social, President Donald Trump credited Kirk with having “brought young people into the political process… better than anybody ever.”As debates over race, gender, and curriculum continue to dominate America’s schools, the platform he championed will remain both a rallying point for conservative activists and a lightning rod for controversy.
Reading between the lists
The story of Charlie Kirk and the School Board Watchlist reflects how education has steadily moved to the center of America’s political conversation. For students, parents, and educators, it opens up questions that extend beyond classrooms: Who defines the values schools should represent? How should local boards respond to changing community expectations? And what happens when schools become arenas for broader cultural debates?The Watchlist projects drew both support and criticism, but together they capture a larger shift: classrooms are no longer viewed only as spaces for academic learning. They are increasingly seen as places where ideas, identities, and politics converge, shaping not just young people but the direction of society itself.