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  5. Tucker Carlson told us he's running for president in 2024. Then he said he was joking. Then he said he's 'fundamentally a dick.'

Tucker Carlson told us he's running for president in 2024. Then he said he was joking. Then he said he's 'fundamentally a dick.'

Mattathias Schwartz   

Tucker Carlson told us he's running for president in 2024. Then he said he was joking. Then he said he's 'fundamentally a dick.'
Politics2 min read
  • Tucker Carlson told Insider in text messages he was about to launch a 2024 bid, then said it was a joke.
  • The exchange occurred hours after Carlson released a video to Twitter castigating the media.

When I asked Tucker Carlson in a text on Tuesday evening if he was planning a run for president, the newly self-employed far-right firebrand had a shocking answer: "Yes. Announcing Friday in New Hampshire."

But my earthshaking scoop was short-lived. After I credulously asked him to confirm that he was serious before I blasted out the news, which would reshape the 2024 presidential race, the former Fox News broadcaster confirmed what millions of Americans have already concluded: He's just an asshole.

"Totally kidding," Carlson wrote. "Sorry. I can never control myself. I'm fundamentally a dick. My apologies."

Carlson's rash messages come as the incendiary monologist attempts to rebrand himself as a full-time Twitter personality after 14 years on Fox News, which fired him earlier this month. Carlson's show became a kind of ideological North Star for the embittered and racialized nationalism that propelled Donald Trump into the White House and then incubated the Trump movement's conspiracy theories and insatiable sense of outrage in the wake of his 2020 election loss.

On Fox, Carlson stoked hatred of undocumented immigrants, glossed over the violence of the January 6 insurrection, and criticized US support for Ukraine. His fans are 63% male and 66% white, according to a survey by Morning Consult. Before he was fired — for reasons that range from sending a racist text message to allegations of misogyny and bullying — he was earning roughly $25 million a year. By moving his show to Twitter, Carlson reportedly stands to lose millions in severance for breaking a noncompete clause in his contract.

My question about Carlson's possible presidential ambitions was not as far-fetched as it might sound. Speculation about a possible GOP primary run has followed Carlson for years. An April poll conducted after his ouster found that 59% of likely US voters had a favorable view of Carlson, higher than Fox News' favorability rating. And despite airing private misgivings about Trump, Carlson has been wielding power from behind the scenes in ways that further blur the line between his roles as commentator and political heavyweight. Text messages show that he helped negotiate the standoff between Republican moderates and the far-right holdouts that eventually elevated Rep. Kevin McCarthy to House speaker on the 15th vote.

Carlson's reasons for deciding to engage directly with the "news media" hours after lambasting them in a Twitter monologue for, in his view, "misleading" the public, remains unclear; the media Carlson has belonged to for decades is one of his favorite punching bags despite being one of its best sources.

After Carlson revised his initial claim that he'd be announcing a presidential run in New Hampshire on Friday, Insider asked whether he'd ruled out a 2024 run for the White House.

Carlson did not reply.


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