Tucker Carlson, Trump
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MAGA, Trump and Epstein
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Plus, Republicans strategists are advising lawmakers to appeal to working class voters when selling Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill" ahead of the midterms.
As Tucker’s attack on Trump over the Jeffrey Epstein mess intensifies MAGA’s anger, a historian of the right explains why this particular obsession runs so deep—and why Trump has no easy way out of it.
A couple of days after the U.S. airstrikes on nuclear targets in Iran, former Fox News personality Tucker Carlson made a radical proclamation: “I think I’m going to pull back from the internet a little bit, and I think I’m going to be a wiser person for doing so.”
A MAGA thought leader described Trump and Carlson as “two of the great minds of MAGA,” saying the movement wouldn’t exist in its current form without either one. This person worried the MAGA perspective was “getting a little squeezed out of the inner circle” at the White House on several issues of note.
As Tucker’s attack on Trump over the Jeffrey Epstein mess intensifies MAGA’s anger, a historian of the right explains why this particular obsession runs so deep—and why Trump has no easy way out of it.
Ben Shapiro on MSN1dOpinion
Tucker Carlson's Accusations Demand Evidence — And He Has NoneBen Shapiro dissects Tucker Carlson’s CPAC appearance, calling out his vague accusations about a high-level government cover-up tied to Jeffrey Epstein and challenging him to directly name Trump, the DOJ,
The Justice Department and FBI said in a brief memo that a review found no Epstein "client list" and confirmed the disgraced financier died by suicide in prison while awaiting tri
Carlson delivered a populist takedown of the economic plights plaguing everyday Americans and faulted the GOP for failing to deliver on its promises to improve conditions.