‘You
unbelievable coward’: conservative US media in open warfare over Iran
Tucker
Carlson, Megyn Kelly, Ben Shapiro and Mark Levin are all trading blows over US
involvement – while Sean Hannity says he’s staying out of it
Jeremy
Barr in Washington
Fri 6 Mar
2026 11.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/mar/06/conservative-media-open-warfare-over-iran
The stars
of the conservative media movement have been duking it out – in extremely
personal terms – over Donald Trump’s decision to enter the United States into a
conflict with Iran.
While it
can be hard to cleanly group the warring factions, much of the fighting has
centered on disagreements about whether the US is too deferential to Israeli
interests. Those arguing that position most prominently include former Fox News
hosts Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly, while conservative media personalities
like Mark Levin (a current Fox News host) and Ben Shapiro have strongly
supported both the American intervention in Iran and collaboration with Israel.
“There
are the classic neocons, there is the populist right, and there are the
anti-anti neocons,” said Curt Mills, executive director of the American
Conservative magazine.
On
Tuesday, Shapiro defended Levin, called Kelly an “unbelievable coward” and
accused her of eliding her criticism of Trump. “You don’t like President Trump?
You don’t like what he’s saying? Just say his name, you coward,” Shapiro said.
“You unbelievable coward. Tucker and Megyn both – unbelievable cowardice.”
Earlier
this week, Levin called Kelly a “Crazy Grandma Groyper”, a term once primarily
used to refer to those aligned with white supremacist Nick Fuentes, who sat for
a friendly interview with Carlson last October that drew criticism from fellow
conservatives. (Kelly had once spoken fondly of Levin, saying she had a “crush
from afar” on him.)
Rightwing
extremist and political influencer Laura Loomer went even further in attacking
Kelly, calling her a “stupid bitch”.
In what
he called evidence of a “Maga divide,” ABC News’s Jonathan Karl reported on
Saturday that Carlson characterized Trump’s attack on Iranian leadership as
“absolutely disgusting and evil”.
The
tension between Carlson and Levin traces back to at least June 2025, when
Carlson accused Levin of “lobbying for war with Iran” during a private lunch
with Trump at the White House. Levin called Carlson a “maggot”, and Carlson
referred to Levin as a “warmonger”. He used the same label for another former
Fox News colleague, Sean Hannity. (This week, Kelly called her former colleague
Hannity “a supplicant to Donald Trump” and said “he would never say anything
other than to puff Donald Trump up”.)
During an
interview on Katie Miller’s podcast this week, Hannity said that he “completely
disagrees” with Carlson, who is “not the person that [he] knew” at Fox News –
though he also said that he’s intentionally chosen to stay out of the
conservative media infighting.
“If they
all want to kill each other, have at it,” Hannity said on the podcast. “I’m way
past the point in my career, Katie, that I care at all about what other people
are doing or saying. I watch it because I have to be aware and I read so much
news I can’t miss it. And, however, my interest in involving myself in it is
zero. I don’t believe my success is predicated on tearing somebody else down,
or their failure.”
For some,
the split over Iran is a sign of a wider issue for conservative media. Jonah
Goldberg, the editor in chief of the Dispatch, told the Guardian that the
latest dust-up over Iran is part of the broader “unravelling of the Trump/Maga
coalition,” a dynamic he said was also visible in conservative criticism over
the Trump administration’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein-related documents. The
clashes, which attract plenty of media attention, are also good for business,
particularly for independent media personalities that need to build their
brands and attract subscribers.
“I think
there is real animosity and serious disagreement among the parties,” he said.
“But the food fight has a reality TV dynamic to it as well. Conflict is good
for eyeballs and clicks. I think Shapiro is trying to be a grown-up, but the
rest of them see the vitriol as a feature, not a bug. There’s a lot of kayfabe
in Trump world and the Maga right.”

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