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Savannah Chrisley came to Erika Kirk’s defense after a fellow reality star called out the grieving widow on social media.
“Selling Sunset” star Christine Quinn took umbrage with Erika’s parenting choices in a post shared Wednesday on X. “Erika Kirk be everywhere but with her kids,” Quinn wrote in a message to her 50,000 followers.
Chrisley, 28, fired back at Quinn, and listed myriad ways Erika has advocated for her two children following the September assassination of her husband, Charlie Kirk.
SAVANNAH CHRISLEY SAYS ‘OUR LIVES ARE ON THE LINE’ FOLLOWING CHARLIE KIRK’S DEATH, VOWS TO FIGHT ON

Savannah Chrisley defended Erika Kirk after “Selling Sunset” star Christine Quinn bashed the mother of two. (Getty Images)
Representatives for Chrisley and Quinn did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
“Wow… this is really disappointing to see from you. I know you’re better than this,” Chrisley posted on X.
ACTRESS AMANDA SEYFRIED SAYS SHE’S ‘NOT F—ING APOLOGIZING’ FOR CHARLIE KIRK POST CALLING HIM HATEFUL
“Erika isn’t ‘everywhere but with her kids’ she’s everywhere fighting FOR them. She’s raising her babies while surviving a level of grief most people would crumble under. Showing up, advocating, building, working… that’s called resilience, not absence.”

Christine Quinn found fame as a star on the Netflix show “Selling Sunset.” (Getty Images)

The “Chrisley Knows Best” star fired back after Quinn questioned Erika Kirk’s parenting plan. (Savannah Chrisley/X)
Chrisley added, “Taking a cheap shot at a woman who just lost her husband and is doing everything she can to create stability for her children isn’t the look you think it is.”
The “Chrisley Knows Best” star signed off on her post with a plea for kindness and understanding.
“Erika is one of the strongest, most intentional mothers I’ve ever witnessed and she deserves compassion, not commentary from people who see a post but not her pain,” she wrote.
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“Taking a cheap shot at a woman who just lost her husband and is doing everything she can to create stability for her children isn’t the look you think it is.”
Chrisley was set to join Charlie Kirk on a college campus tour before his assassination on Sept. 10. The Turning Point USA founder was shot during a campus event at Utah Valley University.
She described Charlie’s impact on her life during an appearance on “Fox & Friends” at Charlie’s memorial service.

Erika Kirk wants to continue her husband’s legacy through his last book, “STOP, in the Name of God: Why Honoring the Sabbath Will Transform Your Life.” (David Dee Delgado)
“I think when this assassin did take Charlie’s life, that was the turning point for him,” Chrisley said. “He thought he was ending Charlie’s life, but he really just created millions and millions of Charlie’s followers to fight. To fight for our freedom, to fight for us to have a voice. For me to watch it, it’s so sad and it breaks my heart. To see Erika [Charlie’s wife] step in as a woman and take on this role, Charlie knew that if he couldn’t do it, she was the only one that could do it.”
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Chrisley said that Kirk “gave [her] a voice in times when she felt she didn’t have one.”
“I was so excited to get to sit next to Charlie and open up to him and get to know him on a more personal level, like a lot of my friends who got to know him,” she said. “But above all else, Charlie has been a voice for our country.”
The reality TV star said it is remarkable to see how Charlie’s legacy at Turning Point USA has impacted young adults, including her brother.

Savannah Chrisley admitted Charlie Kirk had a huge impact on her brother. (FOX via Getty Images)
“To watch my 19-year-old brother and watch all these college kids now show up and be loud and not be afraid because, at the end of the day, our lives are on the line,” she said. “2028 is coming up. And Charlie, he wants us to fight. He wants us to be loud. And he said it himself, ‘If you don’t correct evil, if you don’t speak about evil, when evil is happening, then that in itself is evil.’ So it’s my job to stand up, be loud, and really I don’t care who likes it and who doesn’t.”
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“I keep saying that above all else, Charlie Kirk and his wife Erika, are Christians,” she continued. “Isn’t that really the message? I think bringing Christianity back into households is the only thing that’s going to save us as a country. I know for me, my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, I don’t know where I would be today without it.”
“And so watching Erika, I don’t know how she spoke the word of God after losing her husband. I mean, I was in such awe to know that she is now the leader of Turning Point. I mean, we only go up from here.”

Charlie Kirk was shot and killed Sept. 10 while speaking on a college campus in Utah. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
Kirk, 31, was assassinated at a Turning Point USA event at Utah Valley University in Orem on Sept. 10. He was pronounced dead later that day.
The political activist had traveled around the country to college campuses, where he had conducted question-and-answer sessions with students and discussed key political issues.
Authorities identified the murder suspect as Tyler Robinson, 22, who appeared for the first time Thursday during a hearing in Utah.










