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Hillsdale College Holds 174th Commencement Ceremony Featuring Erika Kirk

Business

Hillsdale College Holds 174th Commencement Ceremony Featuring Erika Kirk
Business

Business

Hillsdale College Holds 174th Commencement Ceremony Featuring Erika Kirk

2026-05-10 05:40 Last Updated At:05:51

HILLSDALE, Mich.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 9, 2026--

Hillsdale College held its 174th Commencement ceremony on Saturday, May 9. The College conferred undergraduate, graduate, and honorary degrees. Erika Kirk, CEO of Turning Point USA and widow of its founder, Charlie Kirk, delivered the Commencement address.

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Students processing into ceremony.

Students processing into ceremony.

Erika Kirk and Hillsdale College President Larry P. Arnn with Honorary Degree.

Erika Kirk and Hillsdale College President Larry P. Arnn with Honorary Degree.

Erika Kirk hooding.

Erika Kirk hooding.

Kirk shaking hands with graduate.

Kirk shaking hands with graduate.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260509059065/en/

“This is our greatest gathering,” said Hillsdale College President Larry P. Arnn. “We will remember that our suffering has meaning. We will remember that our suffering gives joy, produces joy, knowledge, and good actions that come from it and relieve our suffering and deepen our friendship. This is why, despite all the change, we are gathered here to do what we always do. Commencement is about the future.”

This year, 350 undergraduates from the class of 2026 received their degrees, along with 38 graduate students. Ashley R. DeVore and Noah Tom Larrick were co-valedictorians, and Patrick J. McDonald was salutatorian. The class also included a 2025 Truman scholar and two Fulbright award recipients. This year’s honorary degree recipients were Charlie and Erika Kirk, Joseph A. Banach, Stephen “Tony” Batman, and Eleanor E. Flack.

Dr. Arnn introduced Kirk, who addressed the graduating class.

“I think she’s tough. You need that. You need grace. You need beauty. You need tough. You need smarts. Now these qualities are called forth from Erika. She’s maligned while aggrieved,” Dr. Arnn said. “A lost generation needs some help, and now it’s Erika’s job to help give it to them.”

Kirk said that learning elevates our thinking so that we can help bring solutions to a disordered world.

“Through his learning, Charlie was better able to recognize his duty to pursue truth and to defend liberty, and this responsibility — he felt to God, he felt it to our family, to our country, and that was born from what he learned,” Kirk said. “All of you students here that are graduating, you have learned about the permanent things, and you share in that responsibility to be a part of the solution for this nation and this world.”

Kirk encouraged the graduating class to follow her husband’s example.

“As you continue forward in life, I want you to kind of embrace the similar blueprint of my husband, where he loved to point out that God made us purposeful beings, and continue forward in life with clarity and intention,” Kirk said. “You will come to understand that life is not defined by the abundance of options but by the weight of the choices that you make within them, and those choices more often than not are not dramatic or obvious but quiet and compounding, forming the blueprint of your life long before anyone else can see what you are building. Each of us must order his own house, live rightly in aim for high and beautiful things.”

Kirk is the CEO and chair of Turning Point USA, roles to which she was appointed following the assassination of her husband Charlie Kirk in September 2025. She received a bachelor’s degree in political science and international relations from Arizona State University and a Juris Master in American legal studies from Liberty University. Her professional activities involve nonprofit and entrepreneurial ventures and include hosting the “Midweek Rise Up” podcast and leading PROCLAIM x BIBLEin365, a clothing and lifestyle company that seeks to equip believers to live out their faith and to learn the word of God from cover to cover.

During Commencement weekend, the College unveiled plans for a plaque honoring Charlie Kirk to be placed in the undercroft connecting the library to the student union. The area is currently under construction.

Senior Class President Ty Ruddy addressed his graduating classmates, encouraging them to approach life after graduation with humility.

“The class of 2026 will produce the educators, politicians, mothers, and fathers that will guide a generation,” Ruddy said. “If we are to be the great men and women Hillsdale has prepared us to be, we should meet that call with earnestness, let God’s plan map our ambition. We should strive and seek and find — and laugh when we make our shoes muddy — and once in a while stand with our neighbors at the fence and talk about the tomatoes.”

Hillsdale College has held its Commencement ceremony every year since 1860. Recent Commencement speakers have included psychologist Jordan Peterson, Bishop Robert Barron, “Wheel of Fortune” host Pat Sajak, and historian Victor Davis Hanson.

For photos from the Commencement ceremony, click here. Photos from other Commencement weekend events will be uploaded here. A recording of the Commencement ceremony will be available on the College’s YouTube channel. For photos of Hillsdale College, click here. For a high-resolution copy of the Hillsdale College clocktower logo, click here.

About Hillsdale College

Hillsdale College is an independent, nonsectarian, Christian liberal arts college located in southern Michigan. Founded in 1844, the College has built a national reputation through its classical liberal arts core curriculum and its principled refusal to accept federal or state taxpayer subsidies, even indirectly in the form of student grants or loans. It also conducts an outreach effort promoting civil and religious liberty, including a free monthly speech digest, Imprimis, with a circulation of more than 7.5 million. For more information, visit hillsdale.edu.

Students processing into ceremony.

Students processing into ceremony.

Erika Kirk and Hillsdale College President Larry P. Arnn with Honorary Degree.

Erika Kirk and Hillsdale College President Larry P. Arnn with Honorary Degree.

Erika Kirk hooding.

Erika Kirk hooding.

Kirk shaking hands with graduate.

Kirk shaking hands with graduate.

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A former Polish justice minister sought in his homeland for alleged abuse of power says he has traveled from Hungary to the U.S., prompting prosecutors in Poland to say Monday that they're investigating whether he was assisted in evading liability.

Zbigniew Ziobro was a key figure in the government led by the nationalist conservative Law and Justice party that ran Poland between 2015 and 2023. That administration established political control over key judicial institutions by stacking higher courts with friendly judges and punishing its critics with disciplinary action or assignments to faraway locations.

Ziobro announced in January that he had been granted asylum in Hungary, then led by nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.

On Sunday, Ziobro told right-wing Polish broadcaster Republika that he had arrived in the United States the previous day — coinciding with the inauguration in Budapest of Orbán's successor, Péter Magyar, who defeated the longtime leader in an election last month. He said that he was using a document granted to him along with his right to asylum, Polish news agency PAP reported.

Current Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s government came to power in late 2023 with ambitions to roll back the judicial changes made by its predecessor, but efforts to undo them have been blocked by two successive presidents aligned with the nationalist right.

In October, prosecutors requested the lifting of Ziobro’s parliamentary immunity to press charges against him. They allege among other things that Ziobro misused a fund for victims of violence, including for the purchase of Israeli Pegasus surveillance software.

Tusk’s party says Law and Justice used Pegasus to spy illegally on political opponents while in power. Ziobro says he acted lawfully.

On Monday, the national prosecutor's office said in a social media post that it was investigating the whereabouts of Ziobro, and looking into whether other individuals assisted him in "fleeing and evading criminal liability, thereby obstructing the investigation into the justice fund."

Current Justice Minister Waldemar Żurek said in a post on X Sunday evening that Poland had invalidated Ziobro's travel documents, including his diplomatic passport, and that Warsaw will ask the U.S. and Hungary about the legal basis for Ziobro to leave Hungarian territory and enter the United States.

Ziobro's travels raise the possibility of tension between Warsaw and Washington.

Polish Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maciej Wewiór told The Associated Press that “we don’t want this issue to become political."

“Our relationship with the U.S. goes much deeper than what happens with Ziobro," he said. "But we do want our citizen to eventually return to Poland and face justice.”

FILE - Former Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro speaks to reporters alongside in Warsaw, Poland, Sept. 26, 2020. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski, file)

FILE - Former Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro speaks to reporters alongside in Warsaw, Poland, Sept. 26, 2020. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski, file)

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