The Daily Telegraph

Boris denies asking Carlson for $1m

- By Amy Gibbons Political correspond­ent

BORIS JOHNSON has denied demanding a million-dollar fee for an interview with ex-fox News host Tucker Carlson.

The US presenter accused the former prime minister of requesting the payment, equivalent to around £800,000, for the booking.

But Mr Johnson’s team dismissed this account as “untrue”, claiming Mr Carlson had been the one to make the offer.

They said Mr Johnson initially accepted, provided the money went to Ukrainian veteran charities. But the former prime minister decided not to go ahead after the death of Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader.

Mr Carlson, an influentia­l voice in Right-wing US media, is known for his scathing attacks on Volodymyr Zelensky, the president of Ukraine. He said he had been “annoyed” after Mr Johnson denounced him as a Kremlin stooge after his interview with Vladimir Putin.

He claimed he put in a request for an interview, which was initially declined. Eventually, he said he was told Mr Johnson was interested, but it was “going to cost you a million dollars”.

Speaking to Right-wing news channel Blaze TV, he said: “Finally one of his advisers gets back to me and says, ‘he will talk to you, but it’s going to cost you a million dollars’. He wants a million dollars, in US dollars, gold or bitcoin – this just happened yesterday, or two days ago. Then he will talk to you about Ukraine.”

It is the latest flare-up in a row between the pair after Mr Johnson used his Daily Mail column to brand Mr Carlson “a traitor to journalism”.

Carlson denied supporting the Russian regime, but added: “Putin didn’t ask for one million dollars… This whole thing is a freaking shakedown.

“If you’re making money off a war, you know, you can deal with God on that, because that’s really immoral,” Carlson added.

 ?? ?? Tucker Carlson is ‘a traitor to journalism’, says Boris Johnson, for his interview with Vladimir Putin, the Russian president
Tucker Carlson is ‘a traitor to journalism’, says Boris Johnson, for his interview with Vladimir Putin, the Russian president

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