Opinion
Michelle
Goldberg
Megyn
Kelly Knows Which Way the Winds Are Blowing
Oct. 6,
2025
Michelle
Goldberg
By
Michelle Goldberg
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/06/opinion/republicans-conspiracies-charlie-kirk.html
Opinion
Columnist
Megyn
Kelly, it seems safe to say, understands her audience. Since she was pushed out
of TV news in 2019, the biting conservative commentator has built herself an
enormous audience online. She has over four million subscribers on YouTube and
one of the most popular right-wing podcasts in the country. So it’s instructive
to see how she’s positioned herself in the conservative movement’s increasingly
acrimonious civil war over Charlie Kirk and Israel.
Before
Kirk was killed, one of his donors, Robert J. Shillman, reportedly told him he
was withdrawing a $2 million pledge to Kirk’s organization, Turning Point,
because of its relationship with the increasingly anti-Israel podcaster Tucker
Carlson. That fact has set off a roiling debate on the right about the degree
to which Kirk was becoming disillusioned with Israel, in turn leading to
insinuations that Israel had Kirk murdered.
Some of
the more high-profile people behind these conspiracy theories try to maintain a
degree of plausible deniability, insisting, in the manner of trolls everywhere,
that they’re just asking questions.
Candace
Owens, a former colleague of Kirk’s who last year suggested that Judaism is a
“pedophile-centric religion” that “believes in child sacrifice,” claims that
Kirk was about to break with Israel and reunite with her. “He said it
explicitly that he refused to be bullied anymore by the Jewish donors,” she
said on her podcast, asking, “And then did he just 48 hours later conveniently
catch a bullet to the throat before our onstage reunion?”
Carlson
has been even more careful; he hasn’t made any direct claims, only suggestive
analogies. Since the killing, he’s talked repeatedly of Kirk’s impatience with
pro-Israel donors. Then, speaking from the podium at Kirk’s memorial, he said
that Jesus, like Kirk, was killed for telling the truth. He could picture the
scene 2,000 years ago, he said: “A lamp-lit room with a bunch of guys sitting
around eating hummus, thinking about ‘What do we do about this guy telling the
truth about us?’” One of them, in Carlson’s telling, suggested, “Why don’t we
just kill him?”
Plenty of
people — both hard-core antisemites and anxious Jews — thought Carlson was
implying that Jews killed Kirk just as they had Jesus. But, of course, he never
said that; perhaps the hummus eaters were Romans.
Others
have been less cautious; endless posts on social media blame Israel for
assassinating Kirk. The meme became so widespread that Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu of Israel made a video denying it, which only seemed to fan the
flames.
Some
Zionist conservatives are extremely worried about this increasingly paranoid
hostility to Israel in the MAGA movement, and they want to marginalize Carlson
and his ilk. “Cut Tucker Loose” said a headline in the Jewish publication
Tablet, writing that he has “not only embarrassed the administration but also
fractured the president’s base, elements of which are now at each other’s
throats over the words of a glorified podcaster.”
The
conservative actress Patricia Heaton, a Fox News regular, posted a video about
big-name podcasters giving a platform to antisemites. “We’re all seeing it,”
she said. “Many of us are alarmed.” The left, she argued, coddles its
extremists. “Don’t let that happen to the conservative movement,” she pleaded.
But it
already has. Given her stature on the right, Kelly has come under pressure to
denounce Carlson and Owens. She has declined. “If you need me to condemn
Candace or Tucker for their opinions in order to listen to me, then I may not
be for you,” she wrote on X. “He’s a close friend and she is under enough
pressure without gratuitous shots from me.” A few days later, on the “Fifth
Column” podcast, she said she didn’t think Carlson was an antisemite, then
added; “But I don’t really care. I think Tucker’s a very important, valuable
voice in the national conversation.”
Last
month, Kelly went to Virginia Tech, filling in for Kirk on what was supposed to
be his college tour. A student brought up claims the white nationalist Nick
Fuentes has made about Israel — he didn’t identify which ones — and said he was
having a hard time discerning truth from falsehood. Kelly was extremely
circumspect in her response. She told the student to trust independent voices
over the corporate media, but to avoid those who “get too out there, unless
that’s just your jam for fun.” She didn’t mention Fuentes at all.
I have no
way of knowing what’s in Kelly’s heart, but from a business point of view, her
hesitation about punching right seems shrewd. Carlson, after all, is not
tangential to the MAGA movement; he is one of its most important figures. As of
this writing, his podcast is the highest-ranked right-wing show on the Spotify
charts, with Owens not far behind. Fuentes has become so influential that, as
The New York Times reported last month, both current and former Trump officials
are afraid to publicly criticize him. The three of them are far more
representative of the American right than their critics.
Many
pro-Israel conservatives refuse to see this. Under Trump, American conservatism
has given itself over to an orgy of berserk hallucinations, nihilistic
transgression and epistemological disorder. It barely made news in September
when Trump shared an A.I. video promoting “medbeds,” fantasy devices that, in
QAnon lore, can cure all ailments but are selfishly hoarded by evil elites. If
a young person like the one at Virginia Tech can’t figure out what’s true and
what’s not, it’s at least in part because the right has systematically
undermined the very idea of dispassionate expertise. Now, conservative Zionists
are surprised that the resulting chaos has spun out of their control.
Consider
Dinesh D’Souza, who is probably best known for “2000 Mules,” a conspiracy film
about the 2020 election, for which he was sued and had to publicly apologize.
Last week he appeared on the podcast of Laura Loomer, a Trump confidante who
once shared a video on X calling the Sept. 11 attacks an inside job. Together,
they bemoaned how successful Owens and Carlson had been in sowing suspicion of
Israel.
Owens’s
“investigations,” D’Souza lamented, “never produce a single fact, a single
reliable theory that you can work with. They never reach any conclusion. And
the moment they run out of gas, a new incendiary accusation comes in its
place.” Must be frustrating.



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