By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, November 04, 2025
Nick Fuentes hit the jackpot.
The white-nationalist influencer made it on the Tucker Carlson Show, the nation’s
foremost vehicle for laundering noxious ideas into the conservative mainstream.
Fuentes is a Holocaust denier and self-avowed racist
whose goal is to remake the right in his image.
Carlson, who prides himself on asking the supposedly
telling questions when it comes to promoting any number of conspiracy theories,
couldn’t really bring himself to ask any of Fuentes. Instead, he gave the
27-year-old Nazi sympathizer a tongue bath and said at one point of the Fuentes
ideological project, “I guess you won.”
This was just another day at the office for Carlson. The
former Fox News host has made it his business to promote antisemitic tropes and
conspiracies. What Stephen A. Smith is to sports talk, Tucker Carlson is to
obsessive anti-Zionism. There is almost no anti-Jewish theme — dual loyalty,
usury, sinister plotting — that he doesn’t elevate, although he occasionally
stipulates that he likes Israel and has no interest in talking about it.
When Carlson interviewed Ted Cruz before Trump launched
his strikes on Iran nuclear sites earlier this year, he bristled with hostility
for the hawkish Republican senator from Texas. When Cruz noted that Carlson
seemed fixated on Israel, the podcaster retreated to his favorite dodge that he
was just asking questions.
Obviously, though, if your questions all tend toward one
set of insinuations — casting aspersions on one country and suspicion on one
group of people — you aren’t engaged in genuine inquiry but pursuing an agenda
while trying to maintain a modicum of plausible deniability.
A while ago, Carlson welcomed on his podcast Darryl
Cooper, a crank historian with revisionist views on World War II, and
enthusiastically endorsed him as “the most important historian in the United
States” (move over Gordon Wood, Niall Ferguson, and Allen Guelzo, among
others). While Carlson served as his caddy, Cooper explained that Winston
Churchill was “the chief villain” of World War II, while Hitler “didn’t want to
fight.” According to Cooper, the Holocaust was just a product of inept military
planning.
With Fuentes, Carlson was like a broadcast morning-show
host fluffing a celebrity out on a publicity tour for his or her latest movie —
except the interview subject, in this case, was a poisonous toad. Carlson
lobbed softballs while Fuentes inveighed against “organized Jewry” and
expressed admiration for Joseph Stalin.
It was such a dismal performance that it created an
instant backlash and alarm that an ancient hatred — once thought vanquished —
has gotten a notable footing on the right.
The good news is that MAGA is not antisemitic. The
movement is almost wholly defined by Donald Trump, who has a Jewish son-in-law,
likes Jews, and is the most pro-Israel president the country has ever had. His
vision of a new “golden age” for America doesn’t involve kicking Israel to the
curb or marginalizing the Jews, and never will.
Yet Carlson and his allies — most prominently, the
conspiracy-mongering podcaster Candace Owens — are playing a long game to make
anti-Zionism and hostility to Judaism part of right-wing orthodoxy. If they
succeed, they will poison conservatism, morally and electorally. They will make
it turn its back on a significant element of the Western heritage and on the
wisdom of the Founding Fathers, who admired ancient Israel for its
contributions of monotheism and the idea of the law.
For a long time, the fever swamp on the right was limited
to mimeographed newsletters or lurid email chains. No more. We have returned to
a version of the 1930s, when such figures as Father Coughlin and Charles
Lindbergh had huge megaphones and celebrity to use to assail the alleged malign
influence of the Jews.
Just because none of this is visible on broadcast news or
— for the most part — among elected politicians doesn’t mean it isn’t insidious
and gaining traction. Tucker Carlson knows what he’s doing, and he’s made it
clear that Nick Fuentes is his ideological compatriot and friend.
No comments:
Post a Comment