Allie Beth Stuckey Stays Relatable While Standing Firm In Her Beliefs
Christian conservative commentator Allie Beth Stuckey speaks truth eloquently and graciously, yet firmly and with conviction. She takes Biblical teachings from thousands of years ago and applies them to the present day. Perhaps that’s why Stuckey hosts a podcast called “Relatable.”
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The Daily Wire sat down with Stuckey ahead of her AmericaFest speech, and in less than ten minutes, she covered the major topics in the conservative movement in a way that anyone can understand, no matter how well-versed on a topic.
“I think clarity is kindness,” Stuckey said.
Stuckey is in her 30s, has an audience of 25 to 45-year-olds who tune in to her episodes, yet she still connects with Gen Z on college campuses.
“I want to do the best that I can to bring clarity to confusion and bring courage where there is cowardice,” Stuckey said. “I care a whole lot about what the Bible says about what’s going on in the world, and I want to try to bring that to people as much as I can.”
Stuckey’s doing that with the more than 700,000 subscribers who listen to “Relatable.” It’s a decent sample size to get a pulse on how her mostly-female audience feels about the country. She told The Daily Wire that she recently asked her listeners what concerns them most and it was overwhelmingly the growing influence of Islam — a topic Stuckey said is being downplayed in the conservative movement.
I asked my 840k Instagram followers (mostly Christian women) what their biggest concern is for the country right now, and by FAR the most common answer is the growing influence of Islam. I’d like to see this concern reflected in the GOP asap
— Allie Beth Stuckey (@conservmillen) October 26, 2025
“I think it’s strange and dishonest. They are the entire reason we have a TSA. None of us like to take our shoes off or take our laptops out … you can thank Islam for that. I don’t see why we would want to minimize the negative impact on our culture and our country.”
Stuckey said her audience doesn’t know what to do when it comes to the infiltration of Islam in their communities.
“Of course we are all called to love the neighbors around us, but to see your neighborhoods change and the local church that’s been abandoned changed into a mosque, or a business center turned into an Islamic center, and we are told we are not supposed to care about that? We do care, and it scares us. Islam is incompatible with Western civilization. It’s about time we start seeing that and saying that.”
Charlie Kirk also thought Islam was a threat to the United States. Stuckey and Kirk had similar views on many topics — from Islam to family values, to the role politics plays in a Christian culture. She said she misses being able to fight alongside him in the culture war.
“Charlie was an anomaly,” Stuckey said. “He was a political strategist, he was a coalition builder. That’s not me. It might take 40 of us or four million of us to replace what one man was doing. If I can carry a small torch of what was the legacy of Charlie Kirk, I’m happy to do that.”
Stuckey said she carries Kirk’s legacy by pointing people to the Bible, and reminding them that ultimate victory is through Jesus.
“We know who wins in the end: it’s Jesus, he’s coming back,” Stuckey said. “And he’s not here yet, so we have work to do.”
Originally Published at Daily Wire, Daily Signal, or The Blaze
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