Headline: Tucker Carlson Navigates Controversy over Antisemitism and Conservative Infighting
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At Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest in Phoenix, Carlson closed out night one with a lengthy keynote that doubled as a tribute to the group’s slain founder Charlie Kirk and as a manifesto for what he described as the real “America First” Trump coalition. In that speech, carried by Right Side Broadcasting Network, he framed current conservative infighting as a “fake” proxy war over who will control the movement after Donald Trump, and he repeatedly praised Vice President JD Vance as the one major figure who, in his view, truly believes in the core America First idea. He also said he was saddened to be used as a pawn in that internal struggle and emphasized that he is not advising any candidate.
The same event produced one of the week’s most talked‑about moments on the right when Carlson and Ben Shapiro exchanged jabs from the stage. According to Politico and National News Desk reports, Shapiro had criticized the decision to platform figures like white nationalist Nick Fuentes in the broader MAGA ecosystem and suggested some voices should not be given a megaphone. When Carlson followed him onstage, he mocked the idea of deplatforming at a Charlie Kirk event, calling it “hilarious” and implicitly defending the inclusion of controversial figures under the banner of free speech and movement unity. That back‑and‑forth has fueled a wider debate among conservatives over whether Carlson is normalizing extremists or simply refusing “purity tests.”
Those tensions intensified when the watchdog group StopAntisemitism named Carlson its “Antisemite of the Year,” citing what it called his frequent use of classic antisemitic tropes and his recent praise or platforming of Holocaust revisionists and Nazi apologists. The group pointed in particular to his remarks at Charlie Kirk’s memorial, where his description of Jesus’ killing was widely interpreted by critics as hinting that Jews or Israelis were behind Kirk’s assassination. In response, Carlson insisted he is “not an antisemite,” arguing that antisemitism is immoral in his Christian faith and stressing that he has no donors dictating his views. His defense echoed a similar formulation recently used by JD Vance, deepening the sense that this is now a fault line inside the Republican Party rather than just a fight with outside critics.
On the media front, Carlson continues to build out his independent Tucker Carlson Network and his weekly podcast, The Tucker Carlson Show, which has remained one of the highest-performing political podcasts. His AmericaFest appearance functioned as both a political speech and a promotion of that broader media ecosystem, underscoring how he now operates outside traditional television while still driving conservative news cycles and intra‑right arguments.
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