Tucker Carlson vows to help build a third party

Conservative podcaster Tucker Carlson labeled President Donald Trump as 'enslaved' in an interview published Wednesday and said that America needed a third political party. Carlson was asked by the Columbia Journalism Review if he had talked to Trump since the start of the Iran war, which Carlson staunchly opposes. 'I'm not interested in talking to him. I feel sorry for him,' Carlson said. 'He's not a man in charge of his own life at this point. I feel sorry for anybody who's enslaved, including him.' Carlson was apparently alluding to Trump's decision to start a war with Iran, suggesting outsized Israeli influence on the President.

Conservative commentator Tucker Carlson described President Donald Trump as “enslaved” in an interview published Wednesday, while also arguing that the United States needs a viable third political party. Speaking with the Columbia Journalism Review, Carlson was asked whether he had spoken with Trump since the beginning of the Iran war, which he has strongly opposed. “I’m not interested in talking to him. I feel sorry for him,” Carlson said. “He’s not a man in charge of his own life at this point. I feel sorry for anybody who’s enslaved, including him.” His remarks appeared to reference Trump’s decision to enter a conflict with Iran, with Carlson suggesting the president had been influenced heavily by Israel.

Carlson says he’ll help build a third party

Carlson has consistently insisted that Israel was the driving force behind US attacks on Iran, saying as early as March 2 that 'this is Israel's war. This is not the United States's war.' Later in the interview with Columbia, Carlson insisted that the US needed a third political party, as the current system is 'a one-party state posing as a democracy.' 'I'm going to help build a third party,' he declared, adding, 'the US government should have, as its first priority, the welfare of its own people.' No third party candidate has enjoyed success on a national level since Ross Perot's famous 1992 campaign, in which he garnered nearly 20 percent of the popular vote.

Carlson has repeatedly claimed that Israel played the central role in pushing U.S. military action against Iran. As early as March 2, he said, “This is Israel’s war. This is not the United States’s war.” In the same Columbia Journalism Review interview, Carlson also argued that America’s two-party structure no longer offers real democratic choice, calling it “a one-party state posing as a democracy.” He said he intends to support the creation of a new political movement, declaring, “I’m going to help build a third party,” and adding that “the US government should have, as its first priority, the welfare of its own people.” No third-party presidential candidate has made a major national breakthrough since Ross Perot’s 1992 run, when he won nearly 20 percent of the popular vote.

But even Perot did not carry a single state in the Electoral College, and he came in a distant third behind incumbent George HW Bush and eventual winner Bill Clinton. Carlson's comments come just two weeks after he declared on the Can't Be Censored podcast that he was 'out' of the GOP. Carlson also referred to Trump as enslaved in the Can't Be Censored interview. Carlson supported Trump's 2024 reelection bid, calling him a 'wonderful person' at the Republican National Convention.

Perot, however, failed to win any state in the Electoral College and finished well behind incumbent President George H.W. Bush and the eventual winner, Bill Clinton. Carlson’s latest comments follow his remarks two weeks earlier on the Can’t Be Censored podcast, where he said he was “out” of the Republican Party. He also used the word “enslaved” to describe Trump during that appearance. Carlson had previously backed Trump’s 2024 reelection campaign and praised him as a “wonderful person” during the Republican National Convention.

Carlson walks back Trump endorsement

But Carlson has soured on the President since then. In April, the podcaster apologized to his listeners for 'misleading people' in what he said was his erroneous endorsement of the President. The White House directed the Daily Mail to a lengthy April Truth Social post in which Trump lambasted several right-wing personalities, including Carlson, for criticizing him. 'They have one thing in common,' the President said. 'Low IQs.' 'These so-called “pundits” are LOSERS, and they always will be!' he added. The Tucker Carlson Network has not responded to the Daily Mail's request for comment.

Carlson’s view of the president has shifted sharply since then. In April, he apologized to his audience for what he called “misleading people” by endorsing Trump, saying he believed that support had been a mistake. The White House referred the Daily Mail to a lengthy April post on Truth Social in which Trump attacked several right-wing figures, including Carlson, over their criticism of him. “They have one thing in common,” Trump wrote. “Low IQs.” He also called the commentators “LOSERS” and said they “always will be.” The Tucker Carlson Network did not respond to the Daily Mail’s request for comment.

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