Analysis
Maga
media stars back Trump on Venezuela … mostly: ‘It doesn’t make any sense’
Jeremy
Barr
in
Washington
Maga
media used to hate US foreign intervention – now some are cheering it on
Wed 7 Jan
2026 10.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/07/maga-stars-trump-venezuela
“I’m not
going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars,” Donald Trump said after
declaring victory on 6 November 2024. It wasn’t his first pledge to disengage
the US from foreign conflicts, and Trump’s top allies in conservative media and
the “Make America Great Again” (Maga) movement have all rallied to his pledge
to “put America first”.
Now that
the US president seems to have broken his pledge by launching an invasion of
Venezuela, not to mention threatening future actions against Cuba and Colombia
and potentially Greenland, some have reasonably wondered whether Trump’s
supporters in Maga media would hammer him for that inconsistency.
But in
the days since the US forcibly abducted Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro,
and his wife, with dozens killed as part of the night-time operation, Trump has
instead received strong support from his media allies, with a few on-again,
off-again backers expressing some reservations.
“Generally,
the party is going to stand with him on this and conservative media is going to
stand with him on this,” former Republican congressman and talk radio host Joe
Walsh said.
The
conservative radio and television host Mark Levin, one of Trump’s strongest
media defenders, not only celebrated Trump’s military actions but on Sunday
called those who questioned the legality of the incursion, including Senator
Bernie Sanders and the New York City mayor, Zohran Mamdani, “pure evil”.
“They
defend totalitarianism [sic] regimes against our nation’s own security and
interests,” he added. Levin and Fox News host Sean Hannity have also championed
“The Donroe Doctrine”, the notion that Trump’s America has dominance over the
Western hemisphere.
The
conservative commentator Ben Shapiro called out those on the “so-called
isolationalist right” who may oppose the Trump administration’s actions,
referring primarily to former Fox News host Tucker Carlson. Shapiro said that
Maduro was ousted by “a conservative Republican president, a gutsy president,
who makes the calls to preserve America’s national security and her foreign
interests”.
But even
Carlson expressed cautious optimism in an episode of his streaming show on
Monday after Trump gave his backing to Maduro’s former vice-president, Delcy
Rodríguez.
Carlson
said he’s “grateful for the wisdom of not taking out the entire government”,
clarifying: “Not because I support the government, but because we have clear
models in Iraq and Libya and a lot of Syria: it can be very hard to put those
things back together again.” Carlson said it “seems like a much wiser approach”
to keep the government structure in place but “making sure it’s pro-American”.
“That
makes me calm down a bit,” he added.
The
coverage among opinion hosts on Fox News has also been overwhelmingly positive.
Fox News host Laura Ingraham called the capture of Maduro “quintessentially
Maga”.
“America
and the world is a safer, freer place,” Hannity said on Monday night. “And this
administration, they are making no apologies, nor should they.
“Donald
Trump’s like my surgeon: he’s elegant, and he’s precise, and he went in there
with the perfect extraction,” Fox News host Jesse Watters said on the Five on
Monday. “This is not regime change. This is just trying to change the regime’s
behavior.”
Not
everyone is falling in line. Former Fox News host Megyn Kelly, who now runs her
own company and has a radio channel on SiriusXM, mocked the pro-Trump coverage
on her former network, even as she re-affirmed her support for the president.
“I turned on Fox News yesterday, and I’m sorry, but it was like watching
Russian propaganda,” she said on her Monday show. “There was nothing skeptical.
It was all rah-rah cheerleading, yes, let’s go. And that’s fine. I love our
military as much as anyone, and I believe in President Trump, but there are
serious reasons to just exercise a note of caution before we just get on the
rah-rah train.” She said Trump’s actions to depose Maduro were clearly about
global oil dominance and not “this bullshit about law enforcement”.
Kat
Timpf, a libertarian commentator who is a regular panelist on Fox News host
Greg Gutfeld’s late-night show, pointed out the inconsistencies in Trump’s past
comments about international involvement. “Let me get this straight: we go to a
country, we capture their leader, we bomb it, and then we say, ‘We run this
country now.’ And that is not war,” she said, “but when they send cocaine over
here that people are willingly snorting – that is war? It doesn’t make any
sense … I hope I’m wrong. I hope this is suddenly the one regime change that
works out well for us and for the people we are supposed to be rescuing, but we
do not have a very good track record.” (Timpf said on X that she’s received
“very brutal personal attacks” from Trump supporters – and from fellow
long-term skeptics about foreign interventionism – for expressing concerns
about Venezuela.)
The
conservative media personality Candace Owens, who has emerged as a regular
critic of the president, called it a CIA-led “hostile takeover of a country at
the behest of a globalist psychopaths”, she wrote in a post on X, adding that
“there has never been a single regime change that Zionists have not applauded
because it means they get to steal land, oil and other resources.”
And
Carlson, too, who had long warned against “regime change” in Venezuela, seemed
skeptical that the US should be meddling in other Latin-American countries,
including Cuba, where Trump seemed to show interest in intervention. “To spend
all your time worrying about Cuba? I love the Cubans here. Love them. But how
much money do you want to spend out of your kid’s college fund on regime change
in Cuba?”
On his
War Room show on Saturday, Steve Bannon, who prominently opposed the US pushing
for so-called regime change in Iran this summer, called Trump’s move in
Venezuela “a stunning and dazzling strike” and a “bold and brilliant raid” –
though he has questioned the long-term consequences.
There was
also some discord in the Murdoch-controlled print media ecosystem. The New York
Post’s editorial board came out strongly in defense of the raid, writing:
“Operation Absolute Resolve was stunningly successful, fresh testimony to the
tremendous professionalism of America’s servicemen and -women – and of course
to the resolve of President Donald Trump.” The Wall Street Journal’s editorial
board, however, took a more skeptical perspective, writing on Saturday that it
was “odd” that Trump was “so dismissive” of the Venezuelan opposition leader,
María Corina Machado. The board also dinged Trump for talking excessively about
US interest in Venezuelan oil, “which sends a message that the US purpose is
largely mercenary”. On Sunday, the board seemed skeptical about the possibility
of Venezuela’s current leadership remaining in place. “The Trump Administration
talks about its foreign-policy ‘realism’,” they wrote. “But if Maduro 2.0
remains in defiant power in six months, its gamble on his henchmen won’t look
very realistic.”
Walsh, a
former supporter of the Tea Party movement who left the House of
Representatives in 2013, knows the price of standing in opposition to Trump. He
had his radio show cancelled by Salem Radio Network in 2019 after he became a
critic of Trump and announced a primary challenge.
“To be in
rightwing media, it became clear when he first won, you either get on the
train, or you don’t. It’s still that way,” he said in an interview. “If 100% of
the audience came out against what Trump did in Venezuela, you’d see these
people move, but that’s not going to happen.”

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