Tools
Change country:

Tucker Carlson went after Israel — and his fellow conservatives are furious

Carlson gestures with one hand as he speaks into a microphone.
Tucker Carlson speaks in Florida on April 2, 2024. | Ivan Apfel/Getty Images

Carlson mainstreamed antisemitism for a long time, and conservatives seemed not to care. Then he set his sights on Israel.

The New York Times once described Tucker Carlson’s Fox News hour as “the most racist show in the history of cable news.” In the past week, allegations of bigotry involving his new show on X have come from a rather different corner: his fellow conservatives.

The fight started April 9, when Carlson published a friendly interview with Palestinian pastor Munther Isaac. The pastor — who has reportedly praised the “strength” of the October 7 attackers — argued that Israel is no friend to Christians: It bombs them in Gaza, represses them in the West Bank, and restricts their ability to proselytize inside Israel proper. The interview went viral, receiving over 30,000 reposts so far.

Erick Erickson, a prominent radio host and former Carlson ally, spoke for many on the right when he labeled Tucker a “pro-Hamas” ally of “the antisemites on college campuses, and the terrorist-supporting progressives of the American left.” Carlson has, according to Erickson, become “willing to use his platform and formerly earned trust and reputation to persuade the easily manipulated to believe the lies he used to rail against.”

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) wrote a blistering post on X that attempted to banish Carlson from the conservative movement entirely.

“Tucker’s MO is simple: defend America’s enemies and attack America’s allies. There isn’t an objective bone left in that washed up news host’s body,” Crenshaw wrote. “Tucker will eventually fade into nothingness, because his veneer of faux intellectualism is quickly falling apart and revealing who he truly is: a cowardly, know-nothing elitist who is full of shit.”

While Erickson and Crenshaw are seen as more establishment-friendly voices nowadays, the outrage at Carlson was shared even by some in the right’s Trumpier corners: Even the sorts of people who oppose Ukraine aid laid into the former Fox host after the Isaac interview. Only an openly antisemitic fringe of the conservative movement — the so-called Groypers — seem to be gleeful, believing that pitting Israel against Christians can bring old-school European Jew hatred to contemporary America.

“It’s waking people up. It’s making people aware of the fundamentals — which is first and foremost that Jews are not Christians,” said Nick Fuentes, the leading voice of the Groypers. “Once you get into those basics, you can start to build upon that and get to where we are.”

So is what Carlson suggests about Israel and Christians accurate? And what does the right-wing backlash against him say about the state of the conservative movement today?

Broadly, I think there are basically three key answers to these questions:

  1. It’s true that Palestinian Christians are suffering, though it’s largely because they are Palestinians rather than because they are Christians. Carlson’s message, however, does less to draw attention to the plight of the Palestinians than to pit Jews against Christians.
  2. In trying to excommunicate Carlson, conservatives are pretending that he’s changed — but he’s really the same guy he always has been. The antisemitic and otherwise bigoted things he said on Fox were far worse than anything in the Isaac interview and received only a fraction of the internal right-wing condemnation.
  3. Carlson is exploiting legitimate criticism of Israel to fan the flames of Christian antisemitism, which has become a growing problem on the right even as much public attention recently has focused on the left wing.

Let’s discuss each of these points in turn.

Israel doesn’t persecute Christians, but it does oppress Palestinians

Christians are a small minority inside Israel — about 2 percent of the total population. But this mostly Arab group’s numbers are growing, and they tend to do better than their Muslim peers in socioeconomic terms. A 2021 report from Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics found that Israeli Christians were more likely to get a college degree and less likely to be on welfare attainment than Muslims and even Jews.

Israeli law guarantees formal freedom of religion, and there are no legal restrictions on Christian worship. There is some restriction on missionary activity, but that typically only affects travel visas for foreigners rather than Christians living in Israel. No one in the country has been prosecuted for missionary activity.

That’s not to say Israeli Christians have no problems.

Jewish extremists occasionally harass Christians in Jerusalem, and there are tensions surrounding the city’s holy sites. Danny Seidemann, a leading expert on Jerusalem, has warned that settler plans for the city threaten the historic Christian presence there. But this, per Seidemann, is less a reflection of hostility toward Christians per se than it is a reflection of the generalized settler goal to control all the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.

Pizzaballa, followed by other figures in religious robes, conducts a blessing. Ahmad Gharabli/AFP/Getty Images
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Pierbattista Pizzaballa blesses Christian worshipers at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem on Easter Sunday 2024.

But while the Israeli state does not officially discriminate against Israeli Christians, it does oppress Palestinians — and Palestinian Christians suffer along with their Muslim brethren. From churches bombed in Gaza to Israel’s “security barrier” cutting right through Bethlehem, Palestinian Christians experience Israeli occupation the same way that other Palestinians do: as violence and unfreedom.

“The major threat to Christian communities and institutions is dismissiveness. They’re not seen,” Seidemann writes. “What’s seen are Palestinians and Arabs who are always suspected terrorists.”

Most of Isaac’s comments in the Carlson interview were focused on explaining how the general cruelty of the occupation hurts Palestinian Christians. But Carlson’s additions — such as saying Israel is “blowing up churches and killing Christians” — go a bit further. He suggests that Israel is targeting Christians as a class, and that the Jewish state is fundamentally hostile to Christianity.

In doing so, he is playing with antisemitic fire: invoking the longstanding canard that Jews are a danger to the Christian West.

“Palestinian Christians, like all Palestinians, suffer under occupation,” writes Matt Duss, a leading Christian expert on the Israel-Palestine conflict. But “Tucker Carlson is absolutely not an ally in the struggle for safety and equality. Be clear: he seeks division here, not solidarity.”

The right’s turn on Tucker is hypocritical — at best

The conservative movement is highly factional, riven by deep disagreements over all sorts of major issues. But with the exception of the openly antisemitic fringe — which we’ll talk about in a second — most of them have expressed anger at Carlson’s interview. But what’s striking in this discourse is a pervasive sentiment that Carlson’s current output is radically at odds with his work for Fox.

Jenna Ellis, former Trump 2020 election attorney and convicted felon, said on her Salem News Channel show that Tucker’s worldview is “very, very different than who he presented himself as on Fox News.” Her guest, Newsweek opinion editor Josh Hammer, who is Jewish, agreed.

“I genuinely enjoyed watching Tucker on Fox. But it turns out Tucker needed Fox more than Fox needed Tucker, because he needed those guardrails. He needed his staffers [and] research assistants,” Hammer said.

The specifics of Hammer’s claim are pretty funny, as Carlson’s staff at Fox included notorious extremists. In 2020, head writer Blake Neff resigned after his history of racist posts in anonymous forums came to light.

More generally, the Fox show was typically far worse than anything in the Isaac interview.

From openly espousing the “great replacement” conspiracy theory to suggesting that immigrants to the United States are dirty and diseased to peddling the same sort of antisemitic lies that motivated the 2018 Tree of Life synagogue shooting, Carlson consistently worked to make some of the most dangerous fringe ideas in American politics palatable to mainstream Republicans. This flirtation with antisemitism isn’t a break from Carlson’s longstanding persona but an extension of it.

Carlson, sitting cross-legged onstage at Politicon 2018, gestures while speaking into a microphone. Michael S. Schwartz/Getty Images
Tucker Carlson in 2018, while he was still hosting on Fox.

The internal conservative discourse on Carlson is thus both substantively and psychologically revealing.

Substantively, it shows that the right is willing to forgive or downplay antisemitism unless it’s somehow linked to criticism of Israel — in which case there’s a zero-tolerance policy. Psychologically, it shows there is a powerful need to reconcile conservatives’ previous love of Carlson with the reality of who he is, requiring implausible contortions about his changing radically after leaving Fox.

“Tucker Carlson is the same person he was for his last few years at Fox. You may have pretended not to see it because it would have been personally inconvenient, but there were a select few of us on the Right who stated the uncomfortable truth out loud and were scorned for it,” Mediaite’s Isaac Schorr writes.

The reticence among conservatives to acknowledge that Schorr was right all along points to something bigger: that the issue of right-wing antisemitism is much more serious than mainstream conservatives want to admit.

The right’s growing antisemitism problem

In the past few years, the Groypers have looked more influential than many on the more mainstream right seem to appreciate. In 2022, Nick Fuentes finagled an invite to Mar-a-Lago and had dinner with Donald Trump. More recently, popular podcaster Candace Owens has outed herself as a Groyper-adjacent antisemite. While this turn led to her departure from the right-wing Daily Wire, it also showed how much the movement has made inroads on the broader right.

During the Owens saga, Daily Wire CEO Jeremy Boreing sat down for a conversation with Fuentes that was streamed on X. Speaking to a man he had once called “a wicked little s**t with evil ideas,″ Boreing praised Fuentes as a “most talented” and “very funny” broadcaster — and invited him to be a guest on a Daily Wire show.

Stars of David in blues, pinks, and reds hang on a metal barricade. Jeff Swensen/Getty Images
Woven Stars of David at the Tree of Life Synagogue on the 1st Anniversary of the shooting on October 27, 2019.

There’s a lot of evidence that right-wing antisemitism is rising.

While much attention has been paid (rightly) to left-wing antisemitism after October 7, academic research suggests that antisemitic attitudes are disproportionately concentrated among right-wing young adults. Right-wing extremists are responsible for nearly all of the deadly attacks on Jews and Jewish institutions in recent years. Trump’s own rhetoric has long been rife with antisemitic stereotypes and conspiracy theories.

The simple fact is that the worldview of the antisemitic right has clear resonance with the Trumpified Republican party. Their influence is primarily felt online today, but what happens online doesn’t always stay there. There’s enough evidence of this bleeding out into the real world — all-too-often literally — that it’s worth being alarmed about it.

The reaction to Carlson’s interview raises a question about whether conservatives can see this. Are they merely angry that Tucker’s longtime antisemitism turned into anti-Israel sentiment? Or are they capable of the broader self-reflection and self-policing necessary to fix the movement’s deeper problem with Jews?


Read full article on: vox.com
Fact Check: Did Harvard Replace American Flag With Palestinian Flag?
Video shows a Palestinian flag being flown outside a Harvard University building.
newsweek.com
6 reasons for beginners to buy 1-ounce gold bars this May
There are a few compelling reasons that new investors, in particular, may want to buy gold bars now.
cbsnews.com
Why Khloe Kardashian's Latest Bikini Photo Has Both Fans and Celebrities in a Chokehold
Khloe Kardashian's A-lister friends — and family — couldn't help but praise the reality star's yacht pic.
newsweek.com
'The View' goes off on ‘Governor Cruella’ Kristi Noem over killing dog: ‘Sign of a sociopath’
"The View" teed off on Gov. Kristi Noem, calling her "Governor Cruella" and a "sociopath" over her upcoming memoir that reveals she once killed a young dog.
foxnews.com
U.S. tourist arrested over ammo FaceTiming with kids as prison looms
Ryan Watson is facing a potential sentence of 12 years behind bars in Turks and Caicos after four rounds of hunting ammunition were found in his luggage.
cbsnews.com
New poll reveals which party is more enthusiastic about Biden-Trump rematch
A new poll says Republicans are significantly more enthusiastic about the 2024 election rematch between President Biden and former President Donald Trump than either Democrats or independent voters
foxnews.com
‘RHONJ’ Star Danielle Cabral Reveals She Was An Extra On ‘The Sopranos’ “Probably Around The Time” Jennifer Fessler Was Sleeping With James Gandolfini [EXCLUSIVE]
Cabral was "a kid" when she got to work on The Sopranos.
nypost.com
Donald Trump 'Unfit' Billboards Spring Up in Battleground State
According to Mad Dog PAC's website, it was founded to "Fight Fascism. Stop Trump."
newsweek.com
Pope visits Venice Biennale exhibit inside women's prison, consoles prisoners
Pope Francis attended the Venice Biennale of Arts and visited the Vatican's exhibit, which was inside of a women's prison and created with the help of some prisoners.
foxnews.com
Ukrainian-born Congresswoman Voted Against $61B Additional Aid for Her Homeland
U.S. Rep. Victoria Spartz emerged early on as a natural advocate for supporting her native country in its war with Russia.
time.com
New York Squatter Accused of Killing Two Workers Who Came to House
A person has been taken into custody by police for possibly being involved in the double homicide.
newsweek.com
Colorado loses top running back in transfer portal in blow to Deion Sanders-led team
The Colorado Buffaloes lost top running back Dylan Edwards to the transfer portal. Edwards transferred to Kansas State after one season with the Deion Sanders-led program.
foxnews.com
Baking Apple: New Yorkers get early taste of summer as temps soar above 80 degrees
Excited New Yorkers got an early taste of summer Monday as temperatures across the Big Apple soared above 80 degrees.
nypost.com
Inside Josh Charles’ day working with ‘damn cool’ Taylor Swift on ‘Fortnight’ music video
“She was a fantastic director, too, my kind of director, knows what she wants, and then you don’t have to do it eighteen times," Josh Charles said about Taylor Swift.
nypost.com
West Virginia and North Carolina's transgender care coverage policies discriminate, judges rule
Their transgender care coverage policies discriminate, federal judges rule.
abcnews.go.com
Historic New York home lists for just $4,000 — if you can renovate it yourself
If you can show proof of funds for a cool $140,000, this 106 Merriman Ave. home in Syracuse can be yours -- but it will need a big facelift.
nypost.com
Hunter Biden attorney threatens litigation against Fox News
Hunter Biden asks Fox News to remove sexually explicit images from its website, and demands a retraction or correction over other coverage.
washingtonpost.com
Universities Face an Urgent Question: What Makes a Protest Antisemitic?
Pro-Palestinian student activists, many of whom are Jewish, say their movement is anti-Zionist but not antisemitic. It is not a distinction that everyone buys.
nytimes.com
Britney Spears deletes her Instagram again after settling conservatorship case with dad Jamie
Spears deleted her social media page less than 24 hours after uploading a scathing post about the harm she faced during her 13-year conservatorship.
nypost.com
Nevada Residents Concerned About Water as Levels Drop
A recent poll reveals that many voters are concerned about the state's water supply.
newsweek.com
Biden admin ripped for 'agonizing' FAFSA rollout as families stuck in financial limbo: 'Inexcusable'
One stepfather called out the Biden administration's 'inexcusable' rollout of the new FAFSA application, arguing the delays have caused a 'lot of stress' for his child.
foxnews.com
Autopsy Sheds Light on Suzanne Morphew’s Mysterious Death
Chaffee County Sheriff's OfficeSuzanne Morphew, the Colorado mom who went missing during a bike ride in 2020, was killed while under the influence of a powerful animal tranquilizer, a recently released autopsy found.Morphew’s death was ruled “homicide by undetermined means in the setting of butorphanol, azaperone, and medetomidine intoxication,” the Colorado Bureau of Investigation said in a release Monday. Butorphanol, azaperone, and medetomidine—also known as BAM—is an animal tranquilizer that can be used to sedate bears and deer, according to veterinary pharmaceuticals manufacturer NexGen and a study by the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Division.Authorities are still investigating the circumstances around Morphew’s death and disappearance. Her husband, Barry Morphew, was charged nearly a year later with her murder, which prosecutors alleged he’d done after he discovered she was having an affair. They claimed he’d shot her with a tranquilizer gun—which he’d admitted to using to sedate deer and remove their antlers—and tampered with evidence to cover up the crime.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
‘Kristi, darling, I understand completely,’ by Cruella De Vil
You kill a single measly ill-behaved puppy, and everyone rushes to judgment!
washingtonpost.com
Columbia anti-Israel protesters are defying order to disperse by 2pm: Here’s what happens next
Columbia anti-Israel protesters defied the 2 p.m. deadline to vacate the campus tent camp as it expired on Monday — and vowed the stay and even escalate their actions against the university. It was not immediately clear if the Ivy League school would once against call in the NYPD to remove students from the $90,000-per-year...
nypost.com
‘Late Night with the Devil’ Ending Explained: What’s Happening on that Final, Fateful Episode of ‘Night Owls’?
The movie tells you almost everything in the first ten minutes.
nypost.com
Yankees vs. Orioles player props, odds: Gunnar Henderson can excel
Clarke Schmidt has gotten successful results in his starts so far, but he’s susceptible to high contact.
nypost.com
Grisly new details plus motive revealed in case of slain couple whose hacked-up heads, limbs were scattered on LI
A previous robbery has been tied to the slayings — with the two victims having helped the suspects plan the earlier heist and then somehow running afoul of them, authorities revealed Monday.
nypost.com
Mexican man wins typo case against Cartier, keeps earrings bought for $13
Cartier ultimately agreed to let the buyer keep the earrings he had purchased at an inadvertent discount. Not everyone supports the outcome.
cbsnews.com
Solomon Islands' pro-China prime minister to give up post in wake of elections
Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has withdrawn from the contest to remain head of the strategically important South Pacific island nation.
latimes.com
Kathy Hochul Slams 'Above the Law' DA After Traffic Stop Video Released
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul delivered a scathing message to Monroe County District Attorney Sandra Doorley, whose traffic stop was captured on bodycam video.
newsweek.com
Read Brett Kavanaugh's Opinion on Presidential Immunity
Kavanaugh penned a law review in 2009 that argued the prosecution of sitting presidents should be deferred.
newsweek.com
Casino games with the best odds: A complete breakdown
Understanding the odds attached to a specific casino game is a key factor to consider before getting started. Check out this guide for a full breakdown of which casino games provide players with the best odds.
nypost.com
US Dog Owners Warned Against Widespread Deadly Bacterial Illness
Despite availability of an effective vaccine, veterinarian Emmanuelle Butty still sees dogs with the serious disease.
newsweek.com
Columbia fails to reach agreement with protesters, sets new deadline for encampment to clear
Columbia University set a new deadline for pro-Palestinian protesters to clear out the encampment on the campus Monday after announcing the institution will not divest from Israel. CBS News' Tom Hanson is following the latest.
cbsnews.com
James Biden listed his job as ‘Brother’ of Joe in presentation to Qataris: emails
WASHINGTON — First brother James Biden made a “flawless” pitch for Qatar to invest $30 million in a troubled rural hospital provider, a colleague gushed, after he drafted a presentation that included “Brother” of now-President Biden among his credentials, emails show. James Biden, 75, pumped Americore Health for $600,000 in what the firm said was...
nypost.com
Can the Chicago Bears Make the Playoffs in Year One With Caleb Williams?
The Chicago Bears are expecting huge things from Caleb Williams in year one, but can they make a run for the playoffs in their first year together?
newsweek.com
DraftKings Promo Code: Earn $200 Bonus Instantly After $5 NBA, NHL, MLB Bet
Score a "Bet $5, Get $200" DraftKings promo code offer to claim $200 in bonus bets for the NBA + NHL Playoffs, MLB and more.
newsweek.com
Biden admin accuses Israeli military of human rights violations in stunning condemnation
State Department says five IDF units committed human rights violations and while four "effectively remediated," the discussion still continue over the fifth.
foxnews.com
Overlooked Fish Could Solve the Problem of 'Boring' Veggies—Gastrophysicist
Only one in 10 of American adults eat enough vegetables. But we could be missing a simple and sustainable trick in preparing them.
newsweek.com
Arizona rancher's defense expert rips $1M 'political prosecution' by 'ethically bankrupt' officials
Arizona rancher George Alan Kelly will learn Monday if prosecutors decided to bring a second trial against him over the shooting of a Mexican national on his border property.
foxnews.com
Corona receives No. 1 seed for Southern Section Division 1 baseball playoffs
The 25-3 Panthers get the No. 1 seed in Southern Section Division 1 baseball playoffs while all six Trinity League teams make the postseason.
latimes.com
Kamala Harris argues people still getting used to first woman VP, says they 'love to talk about my laugh'
Vice President Harris addressed the focus on her laugh on Monday during an interview with Drew Barrymore and said it was part of people "getting used to" her as vice president.
foxnews.com
Billy Joel serenades ex Christie Brinkley with ‘Uptown Girl’
Billy Joel serenaded ex-wife Christie Brinkley during a concert on April 26 at Madison Square Garden, where the musician has long had a popular residency. A video posted to TikTok showed the model, 70, smiling and dancing along to “Uptown Girl” — up on the jumbotron, for all to see — as Joel sang the...
nypost.com
How Matt Ryan’s fast rise paved way for CBS ousting Boomer Esiason, Phil Simms
Matt Ryan used his unofficial retirement year to set up his broadcasting career.
nypost.com
India protests against separatist slogans at Canadian event following killing of Sikh leader a year ago
India expressed concern and protest after people attending a Canadian event addressed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used separatist slogans in support of a Sikh homeland.
foxnews.com
What to Know About the ‘FLiRT’ Variants of COVID-19
Preliminary studies suggest they may be better at dodging immune protection from vaccines.
time.com
Philippine schools cancel classes as major heat wave spreads across Southeast Asia
Millions of students in public schools across the Philippines are being ordered to stay home after urgent health warnings spread throughout Southeast Asia as major heatwave continues to hit region.
1 h
foxnews.com
Little Marvin Calls Deborah Ayorinde “The Official Muse” For ‘Them’
"She was the warm beating heart of the first season," Little Marvin says of Ayorinde.
1 h
nypost.com