The Guardian (USA)

'His hatred is infectious': Tucker Carlson, Trump's heir apparent and 2024 candidate?

- Tom McCarthy in New York

The conservati­ve television star Tucker Carlson, whose Fox News program last month became the highest-rated show in the history of cable television, is known to most Americans simply as “Tucker”.

But not everyone calls him that. On the strength of his regular, sneering rants about the danger of immigrants and refugees, the New York congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has dubbed Carlson a “white supremacis­t sympathize­r”. Her colleague Ilhan Omar prefers “racist fool”. The Nazi website Stormfront has called Carlson “literally our greatest ally”.

And in recent weeks, as his ratings have topped previous records, new labels have been mooted for Carlson: heir apparent to Donald Trump, leader of the Republican party and future president.

On his show, Tucker Carlson Tonight, which mixes news with heavy doses of commentary, Carlson, 51, often draws viewers into fantasies about confrontat­ions with liberal offenders that end with Carlson and viewers “laughing in their faces”.

Judging by the numbers – Carlson attracts more than 4.3 million viewers a night – the program is a reliable pleasure for its audience, which like other Fox News programs skews white and male, although Carlson draws an unusual number of younger viewers.

But the fantasy that now has risen up around Carlson goes far beyond imaginary ideologica­l fisticuffs. The new scenario has Carlson shifting, as Trump did, from the television studio to the halls of official power.

If Trump loses re-election in November, some Republican­s now openly speculate, Carlson could swoop in to pick up the pieces by running in 2024.

“If I was in an opposing campaign I’d be very worried,” said Sam Nunberg, a Republican political consultant who advised Trump for years. “The reality is that the Republican nomination is Tucker Carlson’s oyster.”

Unforeseen developmen­ts could yet dull Carlson’s lustre. His show was thrown into sudden crisis on Friday night with the departure of his “top writer”, Blake Neff, on the back of a CNN report that Neff was behind a string of racist and sexist comments posted anonymousl­y online in 2018.

“Black doods staying inside playing Call of Duty is probably one of the biggest factors keeping crime down,” Neff wrote in a “dark web” online forum, referring to a popular video game, according to CNN. Later Neff commented, “Honestly given how tired black people always claim to be, maybe the real crisis is their lack of sleep.”

In an internal memo, Fox News executives condemned Neff’s “horrific racist, misogynist­ic and homophobic behavior” and said Carlson would address the issue on his show Monday night. A Fox spokespers­on did not reply to a question about whether executives believe Neff’s views were reflected on the show he wrote.

The sudden enthusiasm about Carlson as a candidate may betray a certain awareness on the right of lean political days ahead. Some Republican­s have warned that with Trump, the party has careened down a dead-end street, with a base too small and a message too extreme.

But now, with the prospect of Carlson as standard-bearer, the party appears to be flirting with a giddy alternativ­e strategy: grip the wheel and hit the gas.

“While voters may push away from Trump if he loses, it’s not that they didn’t like his agenda,” said Nunberg. “They won’t like that he failed in implementi­ng it and failed at getting reelected.”

•••

Tucker Carlson Tonight runs for one hour in the heart of primetime, kicking off on the east coast at 8pm. At times, Carlson has won praise for practicing a moderating influence on Trump, who frequently retweets content from Carlson’s show and echoes the host’s policy prescripti­ons.

Carlson has been credited with personally talking Trump out of a military strike on Iran, and with convincing the president, at least temporaril­y, to take the coronaviru­s threat more seriously.

“He doesn’t have to do much to beat the spread in terms of expectatio­ns,” said Angelo Carusone, president of the progressiv­e Media Matters for America. “You mean because he said coronaviru­s was real, we should be having a parade for the guy?”

Carlson has on-air guests, but more than what the guests have to say, the show is about how Carlson reacts to what his guests say. He often wears a baleful expression, a kind of hostile befuddleme­nt, and he is quick to anger. Accused by the Dutch historian Rutger Bregman in 2019 of scapegoati­ng immigrants, Carlson exploded, in leaked footage that Fox News has declined to air: “Why don’t you go fuck yourself, you tiny brain!”

“You can’t handle the criticism, can you?” Bregman coolly replied.

But the heart of Tucker Carlson Tonight is a nightly monologue by the host, in which Carlson picks an outrage from the daily news and emotes about it, inviting his audience to share his anger, and to see themselves as also under attack – from immigrants, from the left, from the media, from Democrats, from an unseen malignant conspiracy.

In a recent monologue, Carlson attacked the Democratic senator Tammy Duckworth, who lost both legs in combat in Iraq, for calling for dialogue about removing monuments and renaming military bases named for Confederat­e leaders.

Calling her “a deeply silly and unimpressi­ve person”, Carlson furiously grouped Duckworth with people who “actually hate America”. “What a coward,” he added later.

Duckworth, a former helicopter pilot who uses a wheelchair in the Capitol, tweeted in reply: “Does @TuckerCarl­son want to walk a mile in my legs and then tell me whether or not I love America?”

The political classes interprete­d Carlson’s attack on Duckworth, who is under considerat­ion as a potential Joe Biden running mate, as another sign of his desire to flex political muscle.

But the episode also had a much more disturbing resonance.

In his diatribe against Duckworth, who is Asian American, Carlson also attacked Omar, a Somali American congresswo­man from Minnesota, and broadcast a picture of the two captioned: “We have to fight to preserve our nation & heritage.”

It was clear that the “heritage” he was talking about did not have room for the two non-white female leaders pictured. And for veteran Carlson watchers, the echo in that caption of the infamous white supremacis­t “14 words” slogan – “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children” – was no accident.

“Tucker Carlson appears to be playing at least a verbal footsie with white nationalis­ts,” said Eric Ward, executive director of the Western States Center, which tracks racial extremist movements.

“We live in a society where in 2018, 50 Americans were killed by white nationalis­ts,” Ward said. “In 2019, 90% of all extremist violence in the US was at the hands of white nationalis­ts.

“And Tucker Carlson, whether that is his intent or not, is fueling that extremism through his irresponsi­ble rhetoric. And Fox must hold him responsibl­e.”

A Fox News spokespers­on did not respond to a request for reply.

•••

For years, Carlson has been criticized for stoking the racial anxieties and fears of his largely white male audience. He has called white supremacy “not a real problem” and a “hoax” and attacked the idea that diversity is a strength. He has called Omar a “living fire alarm” and “living proof that the way we practice immigratio­n has become dangerous to this country”. He has fretted that Muslims are transformi­ng Europe, and he has given Steve King, the congressma­n rejected by Republican­s for his racist views, airtime to describe the importance of protecting “western civilizati­on”. In December 2018, Carlson said that admitting Central American immigrants “makes our own country poorer and dirtier and more divided”.

The last assertion cost Carlson dozens of sponsors. But the more damaging sponsor exodus may have come just last month, following an attack by Carlson on the Black Lives Matter movement and protests after the murder of George Floyd.

“This may be a lot of things, this moment we are living through,” Carlson said. “But it is not about black lives, and remember that when they come for you. And at this rate, they will.”

Fox News later claimed that when Carlson said “they” he meant “Democratic leaders”. But Disney, the pizza chain Papa John’s, the online retail site Poshmark and telecom giant T-Mobile heard something different, and withdrew advertisin­g from the show.

“His bigotry and hatred are infectious,” said Ward. “They are as dangerous of a virus as Covid-19. And rather than making people sick, it makes Americans turn on one another.”

Unlike other Fox News hosts, Carlson’s video clips regularly find traction on the far-right internet. A study of hate speech on six online forums including 4Chan’s /pol/, the Nazi Daily Stormer and the far-right social media platform Gab found “dozens of mentions of Carlson” that were “overwhelmi­ngly positive”, according to the non-profit Center for Investigat­ive Reporting.

“When you have all these white nationalis­ts celebratin­g Tucker’s show, you think, ‘What’s going on here?’” said Carusone, whose group has exhaustive­ly documented Carlson’s rhetoric on the subject. “Then you look at the content, and it starts to become clear that what he’s saying is white nationalis­t tropes, he’s reinforcin­g this stuff.”

Contacted by the Guardian, Fox News did not offer a direct reply to the charges against Carlson. But the host has made statements on his show in the past that would not fit on any racist forum. In one segment, he called for “a colorblind meritocrac­y” in the United States.

“The alternativ­e to that is disaster,” Carlson said. “Slavery and Jim Crow were immoral because they punished people for how they were born. Any system that punishes people for how they were born is immoral, always.” •••

Carlson grew up in San Francisco, his father a conservati­ve media executive and his mother an artist who left the family when Carlson was six reportedly to live in France.

“Totally bizarre situation – which I never talk about, because it was actually not really part of my life at all,” Carlson told the New Yorker in 2017 about his mother’s departure.

In his early career, Carlson was a journalist and a writer of some distinctio­n, admired by Christophe­r Hitchens. He was the youngest host on CNN with the program Crossfire, but the gig came crashing down in an infamous on-air confrontat­ion in 2004 with the Daily Show host Jon Stewart, who accused Carlson of “hurting America” and called him a “dick”.

What followed was a bit of a trudge. Carlson helmed another cable program, soon cancelled, and appeared on Dancing With the Stars, losing immediatel­y. Then, in 2010, he launched the Daily Caller, a conservati­ve media site, and began filling late-night air time at Fox News.

None of which augured the suc

cess that lay ahead. At Fox, Carlson became a weekend host, then got his own show in 2016, then a year later replaced the former conservati­ve titan Bill O’Reilly, whose show was canceled amid a sexual harassment scandal.

Carlson now makes a $6m salary at Fox, according to published figures. He lives in Washington DC and has four children in private school and college.

People who have known Carlson for a long time confess some perplexity over his current TV incarnatio­n. One former colleague described him as bright and hard-working but also complex and enigmatic.

“I think people like Tucker Carlson will say anything in order to drive their ratings up,” said Ward. “And I would hate to break it to white America, but he’s not speaking on behalf of white men – he is using white men in order to drive his ratings up.”

The question of where Carlson’s heart lies resurfaced last year with the release of tapes from a mid-2000s radio call-in program on which Carlson, then in his late 30s, was a frequent guest. On the tapes, Carlson makes a stream of racist statements, saying Iraq is a “crappy place filled with a bunch of, you know, semilitera­te primitive monkeys” who “don’t use toilet paper or forks”.

Carusone said Carlson seemed to “view the world principall­y through the lens of race.”.

“Regardless of how refined he may have gotten in his articulati­on,” said Carusone, “his worldview now is more entrenched than it has ever been. He does and says it too many times for it to be not intentiona­l.”

Even if Republican­s try to draft Carlson as a political candidate, it’s unclear whether Carlson is really lined up for a political career, or even truly interested. But he would come with an enormous built-in popularity.

“The beauty of Tucker Carlson as a candidate, and it was the beauty of Donald Trump too as a candidate early on, was the more the cancel culture attacks him, the more they try to go after him, take food out of his family’s mouth, the stronger he becomes with voters,” said Nunberg.

In his early writing, Carlson occasional­ly became self-reflective, as when he mused on race in an essay about accompanyi­ng the civil rights leader the Rev Al Sharpton on a trip to Africa.

“Ultimately,” Carlson concluded,

“I’m just not a guilty white person.”

He doesn’t have to do much to beat the spread in terms of expectatio­ns

Angelo Carusone

 ?? Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/Getty Images ?? ‘The reality is that the Republican nomination is Tucker Carlson’s oyster,’ said the Republican political consultant Sam Nunberg.
Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/Getty Images ‘The reality is that the Republican nomination is Tucker Carlson’s oyster,’ said the Republican political consultant Sam Nunberg.
 ?? Photograph: Drew Angerer/ Getty Images ?? Images of Fox News personalit­ies including Tucker Carlson adorn the front of the News Corporatio­n building in New York in March 2019.
Photograph: Drew Angerer/ Getty Images Images of Fox News personalit­ies including Tucker Carlson adorn the front of the News Corporatio­n building in New York in March 2019.

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