Tools
Change country:

Tucker Carlson and JD Vance Couldn’t Agree More

One of my favorite things about America is its limitless tolerance for personal reinvention. In Britain, where I live, lingering, unspoken remnants of the class system define you from birth to death. But you can make a brand-new start of it in old New York. There is no better place to live unburdened by what has been.

However, this same tendency also makes Americans easy prey for hucksters, mercenaries, and narcissists who cycle through identities to find the best version for their current situation. Which brings me to Tucker Carlson’s interview this past weekend with his friend J. D. Vance, the Republican candidate for vice president.

Carlson, who is appearing with right-wing luminaries on a coast-to-coast preelection tour, did not host the Vance event as a member of the media. You might have been confused about this, because he has a newsy podcast with guests and sponsors, but no. He is sui generis, a renegade, a lone wolf. He has been liberated from the shackles of the corporate media, he told his most recent audience, in Hershey, Pennsylvania, “although no amount of sauna-cold plunge-hot bath combinations can scrape off the moral stain of all the time I spent there.” Another way of putting this trajectory is that he was fired from Fox News in April 2023.

[Read: What Tucker Carlson’s spin on World War II really says]

“Every news outlet I’ve ever worked at, which is a lot of them, they’re all controlled, obviously,” Carlson said later in the evening. “X is the place that free speech lives.” By complete coincidence, X is now the best shop window still available for Carlson to promote his media empire, the Tucker Carlson Network. (He gave this publication a less enthusiastic endorsement: “If you want to know the totalitarian impulses of your ruling class, read The Atlantic magazine, where they announce all of it, ahead of time.”)

Carlson’s lone-wolf rebrand is born of necessity, then. But it neatly aligns him with many guests on his tour—people who have also been, as they say, on a journey. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. began this electoral cycle as a Democrat and is now on Donald Trump’s transition team. Nicole Shanahan was a member of the tech elite—she was married to the Google co-founder Sergey Brin for five years—before she became Kennedy’s running mate. Tulsi Gabbard left the Democrats two years ago, saying the party was “now under the complete control of an elitist cabal of warmongers driven by cowardly wokeness.” (Yes, the cowardly warmongers are the ones you really have to look out for.) Another of his guests, Roseanne Barr, had a beloved sitcom, and then unfortunately went on Twitter.

As a Briton, though, I’m most transfixed by Russell Brand, who started his career here as a shock jock—he went to work at MTV UK the day after 9/11 dressed as Osama bin Laden—and more recently has been accused of multiple sexual assaults. (He has denied the allegations, which police are investigating.) Brand, who was baptized earlier this year in the River Thames by the TV survivalist Bear Grylls, spoke with Carlson in Phoenix about his acceptance of Christianity. At one point, he ostentatiously fell to his knees and led Carlson’s audience through a verbose prayer about the “demonic forces of the deep state.” Perhaps his sudden fervor is sincere, but it’s jarring in comparison with his previous public persona.

Carlson’s latest interviewee, however, has been through one of the most dramatic conversions of all. Vance used to be an insightful critic of the Republican Party’s excesses and a formidable analyst of Trump’s flaws. Now he has gone full MAGA, and I keep inspecting his eyes for signs of pain at the humbling contortions he is required to make. Twice, he mentioned the backlash to his and Trump’s comments on Haitians in Springfield, Ohio—without ever mentioning the source of the complaints, which was that he helped spread the false rumor that Haitians were kidnapping and eating their neighbors’ pets.

Vance is a smart guy who has chosen to play dumb for power—just like the man sitting opposite him on Saturday night.

Carlson likes to begin his events with a short homily, hitting a few key themes. At the Vance event, Carlson warmed up with a light indictment of media bias, indicating the presence of Politico and New York Times journalists covering the event, and asking them “to announce who they’re voting for, if they would.” (He didn’t wait for an answer.) Another favored riff is that everyone thought Kamala Harris was a dud until she became the presidential nominee. At the Brand event, Carlson dismissively and incorrectly referred to her as “Montel Williams’s sidepiece,” as if being associated with light entertainment were somehow discrediting to anyone with political ambitions. It obviously wasn’t for Trump, a reality-television star.

Carlson’s speech template also includes an unparalleled bit of bull about the importance of unity. “If you make people hate each other, I’m not sure there’s a graver sin than that,” he told his Phoenix audience. Various hits from Tucker Carlson Tonight, his former Fox News show, floated across my mind: We have to fight to preserve our nation and heritage, which appeared beneath a picture of Representative Ilhan Omar in 2020; This man is a danger to the country, a 2021 reference to General Mark Milley; and, not long before Carlson’s ouster last year, Biden uses your tax dollars for “Homosaurus.”

At many points during Carlson’s interview with Vance, my own brain provided similar split-screen comparisons of past and present. The Vance of 2024 says that accusations of racism are being used against working-class voters to “silence them and shut them up,” but the Vance of 2017 conceded that “race definitely played a role in the 2016 election … Definitely some people who voted for Trump are racist, and they voted for him for racist reasons.” The Vance of 2024 is on a ticket that backs mass deportations; the Vance of 2012 didn’t believe the policy was practical, never mind desirable, calling it a “notion that fails to pass the laugh test.”

The man sitting opposite Vance on Saturday, however, was in no position to call out hypocrisy. The Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit against Fox News revealed the contempt that Tucker Carlson has for Trump—and his own audience. In Hershey, he listened to Vance praise Trump’s keen business mind, and the men shared an awestruck anecdote about the former president’s interest in the difference between Quarter Pounders and Big Macs. In a text to his producer four years ago, however, Carlson suggested of Trump’s business ventures that “all of them fail. What he’s good at is destroying things.”

These turnabouts make one repeated theme of this year’s Republican campaign all the more ironic. Trump and his allies are furious at the legacy media for failing to highlight Harris’s own reversals, which have taken her from the über-progressive of 2019—she really did agree that America should do “transgender operations on illegal aliens,” as Trump put it—to the tough ex-prosecutor of 2024. I have limited sympathy with this complaint. The MAGA right gleefully smashed up the more fact-enthusiastic parts of conservative media, driving out actual reporters at right-leaning outlets, to be replaced with a galaxy of self-important talk-show hosts, podcasters, and propagandists. Is Tucker Carlson going to painstakingly hunt down every Harris utterance from 2019 to lay out how her positions have changed? He is not. He’s going to do a whiffy one-liner about her having dated Montel Williams and wait for the audience to laugh.

The tone of Carlson’s Vance interview was never anything less than cordial. The pair met, they said onstage, at a bankers’ conference, and the conversation made several references to mutual friends. Carlson responded to Vance’s points with phrases like “I couldn’t agree more.” The senator from Ohio came off as far more likable than he does in adversarial encounters, in which he has a tendency to become peevish and condescending. The most interesting section of the interview by far came when Vance described his political philosophy, a blend of populism, isolationism, and protectionism. His vision for America involves lower immigration, more house-building, fewer outsourced jobs, and far less military intervention around the world. Parts of that pitch are also attractive to the anti-capitalist left, which would frame similar policies as opposition to neoliberalism—as are other bipartisan concerns, such as the danger of food additives and the power of Big Pharma. (And as someone who has both eaten a gas-station hot dog and watched incessant cancer-drug ads in prime time, I understand the appeal of these last two positions.)

To Vance and Carlson, non-MAGA Republicans and Democrats are natural allies: Both want to keep “flooding” the United States with foreign workers, Vance claimed, because it’s “good for business.” Added to that, both establishment parties are filled with military hawks. Vance dismissed recent announcements by two such Republicans—former Representative Liz Cheney and her father, former Vice President Dick Cheney—that they will support Kamala Harris. “Their entire politics for the past 30 years,” he said of the Cheneys, “has been using American power to inflame tensions in the world, to draw the United States deeper and deeper into foreign conflicts, which either shouldn’t exist at all, or certainly the United States shouldn’t have any business in.”

Megan Garber: Tucker Carlson’s final moments on Fox were as dangerous as they were absurd.

Vance dates his own skepticism about foreign intervention to Iraq. He signed up for the Marines in April 2003, he told Carlson, because he believed in the necessity of the invasion, but he came to realize it was a “stupid war.” Anyone younger than Vance, who has just turned 40, might struggle to understand what an incredible statement this is from a would-be Republican vice president. In the 2000s, the GOP clamor for war was so great that anyone who opposed it was painted as a pinko and probably a terrorist sympathizer.

And that is a reflection of just how far the mainstream of the party has shifted in less than a decade. Vance is now MAGA’s leading in-house intellectual, and Carlson—who turned against the Iraq War before most other Republicans did—is its unofficial minister of propaganda. After slipping the surly bonds of Fox News, Carlson no longer faces any real restraint on his crankiest tendencies. (Since leaving the network, he has interviewed both a Nazi apologist and a man who claims to have slept with Barack Obama.) Vance, meanwhile, has ascended through right-wing politics thanks to Trump’s patronage, to which he owes his Senate seat. He seems to feel very little loyalty to the Republican Party as an institution, or to its long history and traditions. He appeared on a tour whose next stop, in Reading, Pennsylvania, was an event with the conspiracy theorists Alex Jones and Jack Posobiec.

“For 40 years, we haven’t had a real political opposition in this country,” Vance told Carlson at the end of their interview. “And now we do.”


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Submit a question for Jennifer Rubin about her columns, politics, policy and more
Submit your questions for Jennifer Rubin’s mail bag newsletter and live chat.
1m
washingtonpost.com
US Navy’s lone oil ship in the Middle East damaged after filling up aircraft carrier
The USNS Big Horn, which resupplied the aircraft carrier earlier this month, was towed to safety and anchored off the coast of Oman, with an investigation under way, Navy officials said, declining to elaborate further on the incident.
5 m
nypost.com
Kristen Bell on the feel-good power of romantic comedies
Kristen Bell returns to romantic comedies in Netflix's "Nobody Wants This," playing a podcast host navigating modern dating challenges.
5 m
cbsnews.com
My Gen Z employee wanted to leave work early since she finished her tasks — here’s how I replied
A simple text between a Gen Zer employee and a millennial boss has revealed just how much work expectations have changed.
9 m
nypost.com
Hezbollah missile commander killed in Israeli airstrike — 4th terror leader to be taken out in a week
Ibrahim Kobeisi, the Hezbollah commander overseeing the terrorists' missile unit is the latest top official slain by an Israeli airstrike as the Jewish state continues to decimate the Iran-backed terror group's leadership.
nypost.com
The 10 best books we read in September 2024, ranked and reviewed
Plus, exclusive insight on most titles from Amazon Books editors.
nypost.com
Best Christmas gifts for dad: 40 ideas, from unique to useful to funny
It's not just us recommending the products — we got our dads on this edit, too.
nypost.com
Ne-Yo called ‘Diddy Jr.’ by ex in resurfaced video: ‘Tell them about the freak-offs’
“Tell them about the freak-off, Diddy Jr.,” Sade Bagnerise said in the video as the “So Sick” singer played his video game in a dimly-lit room.
nypost.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs accused of ‘violently’ raping woman and filming attack in 2001 following sex trafficking arrest
Thalia Graves accused Combs and his security guard of giving her a laced drink and then raping her at his recording studio in 2001.
nypost.com
Elon Musk and Italian PM Giorgia Meloni have public love-in on sidelines of UNGA: ‘Even more beautiful on the inside than she is on the outside’
Meloni, 47, personally requested that Musk, 53, introduce her at the Atlantic Council dinner, which has become the social crown jewel of the United Nations General Assembly.
nypost.com
Prince Harry’s Family Speech Is Also Aimed at His and Meghan’s Haters
John Nacion/Getty ImagesPrince Harry has publicly reinforced his status as a family man and his commitment to his children in a moving address in New York Tuesday, pushing back against narratives by some critics hinting that he was happy to be spending a week away from his family.In a speech at the Clinton Global Initiative promoting his and Meghan Markle’s charity the Parents Network, which seeks to protect children from harm from social media, Harry said that his own phone had a lock screen of his children, saying: “My lock screen is a picture of my kids, what is yours?”The screen behind him then filled with screen grabs of lock screen pictures of children who had died after taking their own life after social media bullying.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Kamala Harris wants to end filibuster to push Roe v Wade abortion rights through Congress
Vice President Kamala Harris said Tuesday she wants to gut the Senate’s 60-vote legislative filibuster to push legislation codifying Roe v. Wade through Congress, upending more than a century of procedure. “I think we should eliminate the filibuster for Roe and get us to the point where 51 votes would be what we need to actually...
nypost.com
Florida man killed in fight over what song was played on Mexican restaurant’s jukebox
Socorro Camacho, 54, was killed in the scuffle at Antojitos Mexicanos in Fort Lauderdale early Monday.
nypost.com
Hit by a sales slump, Olive Garden plans a menu change
Olive Garden's same-restaurant sales dropped in its most recent quarter. Now, it's tweaking its menu.
cbsnews.com
La vida y legado de Rocío Dúrcal llegará a la gran pantalla
A casi dos décadas de su fallecimiento, la trayectória de la legendaria cantante y actriz española cobrará vida a través de una película biográfica
latimes.com
69 best e-gift cards to make sure they get what they really want for Christmas
Who doesn't love a gift card?
nypost.com
Katt Williams sends warning to Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ inner circle after arrest: ‘About to snitch on everybody’
In January, the comedian claimed on Shannon Sharpe's "Club Shay Shay" podcast that he refused invites to Combs' parties on multiple occasions.
nypost.com
Jessica Simpson smolders in corsets and sheer lace on Instagram: ‘Pure magnetism’
Fans were loving the sultry ensembles, with one writing, "This is a daring look, but you look great."
nypost.com
Ukraine says its soldiers recaptured a Russian stronghold after hand-to-hand fighting
Officials say Ukrainian troops engaged in hand-to-hand combat as they drove Russian forces out of a huge processing plant in the town of Vovchansk.
latimes.com
Zelenskyy to meet Thursday with senators
It's unclear whether Ukraine's president will also meet with House members.
cbsnews.com
Nearly all of Florida under state of emergency as Tropical Storm Helene forms in Caribbean Sea
Hurricane Watches have been issued for parts of Florida, including Tampa, as the U.S. Gulf Coast prepares for significant impacts from Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine, which will likely become major Hurricane Helene in the coming days.
nypost.com
Reggie Bush lawsuit accuses USC, Pac-12, NCAA of profiting from his NIL 'without compensating Bush one penny'
Heisman Trophy winner Reggie Bush sues USC, the Pac-12 and the NCAA over name, image and likeness compensation he alleges he lost while in college and after he left.
latimes.com
Alaska GOP pol poses with ‘Deadliest Catch’ stars in new ad after taking polling lead
An Alaska Republican posed with stars from the TV show “The Deadliest Catch” who are supporting him, according to a new ad out Tuesday, after taking the polling lead from his Democratic opponent. GOP candidate Nick Begich rolled out the ad titled “Attack,” which features the Time Bandit boat made famous by the hit show....
nypost.com
Report: Republican Rep. Anthony D'Esposito Paid Mistress and Fiancee's Daughter with Taxpayer Funds
Rep. Anthony D'Esposito (R-NY) provided part time jobs in his congressional office to both his fiancée's daughter and his mistress, a New York Times report reveals. The post Report: Republican Rep. Anthony D’Esposito Paid Mistress and Fiancée’s Daughter with Taxpayer Funds appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Nolte: Media Appear Scared to Confirm Kamala Harris's McDonald's Job
The corrupt corporate media appear terrified to look into the disputed claim that Kamala Harris once worked at McDonald’s. The post Nolte: Media Appear Scared to Confirm Kamala Harris’s McDonald’s Job appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Here’s what ‘luxury’ vacation means to Americans who crave it — and here’s how to experience it
82% of Americans who have never experienced “luxury” while on vacation still believe it’s attainable.
nypost.com
Johnson to sidestep GOP rebels on government funding, seek Dem support to avoid shutdown
House Speaker Mike Johnson is poised to seek Democratic help to pass his government funding plan after a conservative rebellion derailed his initial measure.
foxnews.com
IDF confirms Hezbollah commander in charge of missiles and rockets killed in airstrike
Israel Defense Forces said an Israeli airstrike in Beirut, Lebanon, killed Ibrahim Muhammad Qabisi, commander of Hezbollah’s missiles and rockets force.
foxnews.com
Trump Tribute ‘Fighter’ Debuts on Billboard Top 5 in Digital Sales
In the first week of its release, "Fighter" -- the Trump tribute song that has gone massively viral -- has debuted in the top 5 on Billboard's Digital Sales Charts. The single, co-written by veteran Nashville hitmaker Chris Wallin and performed by Breitbart's own Jon Kahn, landed at the No. 4 spot, meaning it was was the fourth most purchased song across all digital platforms. The post Trump Tribute ‘Fighter’ Debuts on Billboard Top 5 in Digital Sales appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
GOP urges 'transparency' on whether Walz admin removing noncitizens from Minnesota voter rolls
GOP lawmakers and the RNC asked Minnesota election officials about voter roll cleanup and whether they're removing improperly registered noncitizens.
foxnews.com
Cheeky nudists strip naked to celebrate body positivity — in a chilly underground cave: ‘Very exhilarating’
This is one booty-baring blast.
nypost.com
‘Selling Sunset’ star Mary Bonnett claims producers orchestrated her pregnancy reveal scene
“Naturally, they wanted to capture the entire thing on camera, so they asked me to wait to take the pregnancy test until they could be there."
nypost.com
This area in North Carolina, home to America’s fastest-growing suburb thanks to affordability, is also seeing skyrocketing luxury sales
While wealthy home buyers are targeting global hotspots like Dubai and New York, they're also boosting high-dollar home sales around Lake Norman.
nypost.com
Michelle Pfeiffer makes ‘risky’ move in marriage with husband David E Kelley
Michelle Pfeiffer landed a role in husband David E. Kelley's upcoming project, marking the first time the married couple has worked together in 31 years.
foxnews.com
The Heights soccer finds a new style; Independence golf wins by 27 strokes
In other fall sports notes: Mount Hebron girls’ soccer bounces back and Richard Montgomery volleyball kicks off its title defense.
washingtonpost.com
Head of United Nations calls global situation 'unsustainable' as annual meeting of leaders opens
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres is warning that impunity, inequality and uncertainty are creating an “unsustainable world."
latimes.com
Diddy Is Sharing Space With Sam Bankman-Fried in Prison
Samir Hussein/Getty ImagesThey are the most unlikely of cellmates: a rap tycoon with a penchant for “white parties” and a crypto king serving 25 years for a very white-collar crime.But, according to reports, Sean “Diddy” Combs and FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried are sharing the same “dormitory-style” room at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York.Both men are also in the same living space at the notoriously tough jail in what sources told NBC was a “barrack-style area,” housing around 18-20 inmates. Separated from the general prison population, the detainees tend to be men in need of some form of protection—be them high-profile or those sequestered after cooperating with authorities.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Simic family, with two football players turned doctors, continues legacy on the field
Will Simic, the starting center at Oaks Christian, is the son of Dr. Paul Simic, a former Sherman Oaks Notre Dame lineman.
latimes.com
Hayden Panettiere discusses mental and physical health after fans raise concern
Hayden Panettiere has addressed her mental and physical health after a recent interview that left fans concerned about her well-being. The “Nashville” star appeared on the latest episode of “Today With Hoda and Jenna,” where she was asked how she was managing public conversations while grieving the loss of her brother, Jansen Panettiere. Watch the...
nypost.com
Retired NFL Quarterback Brett Favre Says He Has Parkinson’s Disease
Favre made the disclosure as part of his testimony about a welfare misspending scandal in Mississippi.
time.com
Tigers call up top prospect Jackson Jobe to finish off amazing run to playoffs
The Detroit Tigers are the hottest team in baseball and they're making sure they do everything possible to secure an unlikely playoff spot.
nypost.com
Nanny secretly filmed by millionaire boss in 'hundreds' of videos wins $2M payout
Nanny Kelly Andrade, 25, won $2.78 million in court this month after her boss, father-of-four Michael Esposito, 35, secretly filmed her "hundreds" of times with a hidden camera.
foxnews.com
‘Anora’ Features the Best Fight Scene of 2024: Mikey Madison Beating Up Russian Goons In Her Underwear
Sean Baker's delightful new screwball comedy features better action than most Marvel films.
nypost.com
Ohio GOP Senate candidate says abortion not "an issue" for women "past 50"
"Are you trying to lose the election?" former Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley reacted.
cbsnews.com
There Are No Winners in a Israel-Hezbollah War
A barrage of Israeli strikes since Monday has killed at least 558 people in Lebanon, and raised fears of a devastating all-out war.
time.com
Elon Musk seeks dismissal of Don Lemon’s lawsuit over canceled X deal
Musk said he did nothing wrong by allegedly telling Lemon there was "no need" to sign a contract, and that he and X would give Lemon "full authority and control" over his work even if they did not like his views.
nypost.com
The Harris border catastrophe is putting hundreds of thousands of kids in danger: Happy now, Dems?
The latest Harris border horror? Kids as young as 8 being drugged and trafficked into the United States by criminals posing as their parents.  Worse: Thanks to the vast scale of the illegal invasion, no one knows how common this obscene practice is.  In recent weeks, law enforcement has saved kids from two separate such...
nypost.com
Maryland Sues Shipping Companies to Cover Costs of Bridge Collapse
The lawsuit is the latest legal fallout from the disaster in March, which killed six people and halted operations at the Port of Baltimore.
nytimes.com