Tucker Carlson does not have the power to expose politicians’ hidden beliefs, but he can pressure politicians to briefly expose their hidden priorities.
“That’s not my concern,” former Vice President Mike Pence snapped when Carlson pressured him on growing aid for Ukraine as U.S. cities decline.
Tucker Carlson asks Pence why he is more concerned with supplying Ukraine with tanks than the wellbeing of American cities…
— Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸 (@jacksonhinklle) July 14, 2023
Pence’s response? “American cities aren’t my concern.” pic.twitter.com/8uRE1Bnz8B
“Tucker, I hope we’ll be able to talk about some issues,” former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson complained when Carlson asked him about the government policy of pushing troubled children into “transgender” sterility and loneliness.
“That’s a very difficult task to deport them all at one time,” Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) dodged when Carlson asked him about deporting Joe Biden’s new flood of several million job-seeking illegals. But he was very clear that illegals should not be allowed to get the citizenship status that enables them to vote on whether or not politicians keep their jobs.
Tucker asking Tim
— Sue Knows Best (@sues86453) July 15, 2023
Scott what he would do about illegals. He said it would be a “very difficult task to find them.” Really?
Most have Biden phones and the rest receive taxpayer benefits. Pretty sure we can find them and deport… IF YOU WANTED TOO! pic.twitter.com/SZS3kopa1E
Former President Donald Trump declined the opportunity to face Carlson, who has not always been complimentary about Trump’s ability to push popular reforms through the hostile D.C. swamp.
Trump’s exit left Carlson to dominate the July 14 Family Leadership Summit in Iowa.
But Carlson combined his tough questions with entertainment — because he’s spent decades watching his ratings rise and fall in various cable TV shows. So he wrapped the political drama in humor:
“Who blew up the Nord Stream Pipeline?” he asked former Gov. Nikki Haley.
“I don’t know … there are a lot of things strange with the Biden administration,” she replied.
Tucker Carlson asks neocon Nikki Haley: "who blew up the Nord Stream Pipeline?"
— Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸 (@jacksonhinklle) July 14, 2023
She is speechless... pic.twitter.com/WunfGsQLMF
“If they’re still classifying the JFK assassination docs 60 years later, they’re just mocking us, aren’t they?” he asked Haley.
“It’s the same thing with the UFOs,” she replied, adding:
They’re totally making everybody want to know what happened. You just need to release all of that. Release it all let us see it. There’s no reason to hold on to that. Now release it.
“What’s your guess on that?” Carlson asked Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis when DeSantis denounced the government’s tepid investigation into the discovery of a bag of cocaine in a White House lobby.
Ron DeSantis: “Adult material does not belong in a 5th grade classroom. If you want to see the pornography, just check out Hunter’s laptop.”
— 1776 (@TheWakeninq) July 15, 2023
Tucker Carlson: “Is that available in your schools?”
pic.twitter.com/TR10E8YAPy
Carlson is free to ask difficult questions since he is not working for the establishment media. He lost his evening TV show because his populist questions prompted Fox’s establishment board to shut him down, despite the resulting huge loss of viewers.
In fact, Carlson has a pocketbook and a ratings incentive to keep the pressure on politicians. Millions of ordinary Americans have given up on the establishment’s media coverage of the establishment’s political priorities. That popularity was made clear the next day when Carlson spoke at the TPUSA Conference in Florida:
Tucker Carlson takes the stage at the @TPUSA Conference in West Palm Beach, FL to a standing ovation.
— Julia 🇺🇸 (@Jules31415) July 15, 2023
“I don’t think most unemployed people get a reception like that,” he joked. pic.twitter.com/9j1d5ioV1v
So Carlson kept the questions lively at the Iowa summit by jumping from subject to subject.
But that liveliness also makes it harder for viewers to compare each candidate.
For example, he asked Scott a question that should be asked of all politicians: “What are the big issues on which you disagree with your donors?”
Scott evaded the question, but Florida’s DeSantis made a point of directly answering the question without being asked:
[Abortion and life] is a critical issue, and it is one that I’m happy to have done, and oh, by the way, this is an issue where I had a lot of supporters who were averse to me on this. Donors saying they didn’t want to support me if I stood for life. It’s been written about how I lost a lot of really big supporters. Some of them just aren’t pro-life, some of them think it’s a political liability. And at the end of the day, you get into office to be able to do what’s right. And you’ve got to stand on principle and you’ve got to say, “Why am I here?” If you’re here to contort yourself into a pretzel, to try to not have to take on big issues, to take the political road that’s easier to travel, then you’re not somebody that’s dependable. So we stood up, we did what was right. We lost some support as a result of that. But if I had a chance to do it again, I do it every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
JUST IN: Ron DeSantis asked by Tucker Carlson if he'd sign a national six-week abortion ban
— Florida’s Voice (@FLVoiceNews) July 14, 2023
"Of course I want to sign pro-life legislation [...] You've got to stand on principle [...] If you're here to contort yourself into a pretzel to [not] take on big issues [then] you're not… pic.twitter.com/GsD58GvBt7
Several of the politicians stared daggers at Carlson — and the leading candidate refused to sit in the hot seat.
“I’m going to appoint Tucker Carlson as my bye-bye ambassador, to figure this out,” Scott responded when Carlson asked him about the government’s ability to deport migrants.
All the more reason for Carlson to keep asking questions that reveal the true nature of the GOP’s polished, protected, and sometimes pompous politicians.