Nicki Minaj came out as a full-blown MAGA supporter during her surprise appearance at a Sunday event held by Turning Point USA, a nonprofit co-founded by the late conservative provocateur Charlie Kirk. In the wake of her appearance, a video of Kirk criticizing the rapper has resurfaced on social media.
Recorded during an April 2024 campus debate, the clip shows Kirk labeling Minaj as a bad role model for young Black women. However, his full comment suggests Kirk may have confused Nicki with her fiercest rival, Cardi B, as he referenced the latter’s smash hit “WAP” with Megan Thee Stallion.
“Black culture is being held captive by influences, songs, and role models,” he said. “Nicki Minaj, Cardi B, I don’t think that’s a good role model for 18-year-old Black girls. I don’t think that songs that are talking about glorifying wet female genitalia — I don’t know which one wrote that song.”
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To further complicate things, conservative pundit Candace Owens shared screenshots in October of a purported 2018 text exchange with Kirk. In the messages, he praised Minaj’s breakout verse on Kanye West’s “Monster.”
“When Nicky drops I lose my mind,” Kirk wrote, notably mispelling the rapper’s name.
Kirk also tweeted in support of Minaj in September 2021 after she claimed her Twitter account was suspended for spreading COVID-19 misinformation.
“Democrats’ treatment of Nicki Minaj should be all the proof you need that they don’t care about black people, especially those they can’t control,” he wrote. “They just use them every 4 years for their votes. But people are waking up.”
In short, Kirk’s stance on Minaj at the time of his assassination in September 2025 remains unclear.
Regardless, Minaj was warmly received during her Q&A session with his widow, Erika Kirk, at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest. Vice President JD Vance, whom Nicki playfully praised as a political “assassin,” wrote an effusive tweet in support of the rapper following the event.
Here’s what Charlie Kirk thought about you, @NICKIMINAJ.
“I don’t think that’s a good role model for 18-year-old black girls.” pic.twitter.com/QuvMTHcbAE
— Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) December 23, 2025

