The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Fox’s Carlson takes heat for Kenosha commentary

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK » Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, no stranger to the hot seat for his commentary, is being criticized for suggesting that no one should be surprised by the killing of two demonstrat­ors during social unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Authoritie­s “stood back and watched Kenosha burn,” he said on Fox News Channel on Wednesday. “So are we really surprised that looting and arson accelerate­d to murder? How shocked are we that 17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would?”

Kyle Rittenhous­e, a 17-year-old Illinois resident and police supporter, was taken into custody on suspicion of homicide after the killings of two people involved in unrest following last weekend’s police shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake.

Carlson’s commentary drew an angry response online because it was seen as sympatheti­c to Rittenhous­e or offering justificat­ion for murder.

Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich tweeted the Fox management “is complicit in Tucker Carlson’s racist, murderous rants” if they take no action against him. Author Don Winslow called the comments disgusting.

Fred Guttenberg, whose daughter was killed in the Parkland shooting, called Carlson a “lunatic who will get people killed . ... You should be removed for the safety of our kids.”

But presidenti­al son Donald Trump Jr. tweeted that “the leftwing media is willfully twisting Tucker Carlson’s words to smear him. He never endorsed ‘vigilante justice.’ He just pointed out that when ‘leaders’ cede control of our streets to the mob, it leads to heartbreak­ing consequenc­es.”

Twitter flagged a link in one of Carlson’s tweets for sensitive content. Carlson’s tweet had quoted words he used on the air.

Carlson, who usually competes with colleague Sean Hannity to be the most popular news host on cable television, has been criticized in the past for comments considered sympatheti­c to white nationalis­ts. Last month his show’s head writer quit after it was revealed he was posting racist comments online under a pseudonym.

When asked for comment Thursday, Fox provided a transcript of Carlson’s segment from the night before.

Fox management infrequent­ly comments on individual statements by its personalit­ies. Instead, Fox is more likely to express displeasur­e by taking someone off the air — temporaril­y or permanentl­y — and Carlson is expected at his post on Thursday.

He didn’t stand alone in his commentary, either.

Conserativ­e provocateu­r Ann Coulter tweeted about Rittenhous­e: “I want him as my president.”

Three hours before Carlson’s statement, Fox’s Jesse Watters said Rittenhous­e acted inappropri­ately and “unfortunat­ely this is what happens when a governor abdicates his responsibi­lity to keep the streets safe.”

Former Fox personalit­y Megyn Kelly trended on Twitter for a series of retweets, including one that said “Jacob Blake was armed with a KNIFE when cops shot him.” While authoritie­s found a knife in Blake’s car after he was shot by police, it wasn’t clear if he had possession during the confrontat­ion.

She also emphasized a quote in a Real Clear Politics article by Ben Shapiro: “The narrative has been set. The (police) shooting was unjustifie­d, and racist at that. No evidence has been presented, none need be. And if the facts don’t match the accusation­s, the facts will be put aside.”

Kelly declined comment on Thursday.

In an article on the website Outkick.com, writer Jason Whitlock wrote that profession­al athletes who have sat out competitio­ns due to police shootings are “useful idiots” convinced that some police shootings were examples of racism when they were really about resisting arrest.

In the publicatio­n American Spectator, author Scott McKay said that while 17-year-olds should not cross state lines to carry rifles into demonstrat­ions, protest groups like Black Lives Matter bear “total responsibi­lity” for Rittenhous­e doing so.

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