Tucker
Carlson Says He Is ‘Tormented’ by His Past Support for Trump
“I want
to say I’m sorry for misleading people,” said the conservative commentator, who
has broken sharply with the president over the war with Iran.
Tim Balk
By Tim
Balk
April 21,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/us/politics/tucker-carlson-trump-apology.html
Tucker
Carlson, who was often at Donald J. Trump’s side during the 2024 presidential
campaign, is now expressing remorse for that support, saying he will long be
“tormented” by his role helping Mr. Trump return to the White House.
Mr.
Carlson, a titan of conservative media who has broken sharply with Mr. Trump
over the war with Iran, acknowledged that he was part of the “reason this is
happening right now,” referring to the conflict.
“It’s not
enough to say, well, I changed my mind — or like, oh, this is bad, I’m out,”
Mr. Carlson said in an episode of his podcast released Monday.
“It’s a
moment to wrestle with our own consciences,” Mr. Carlson said on the podcast,
speaking with his brother, Buckley, a former speechwriter for Mr. Trump. “We’ll
be tormented by it for a long time. I will be. And I want to say I’m sorry for
misleading people.”
Mr.
Carlson, a former Fox News host and a longtime opponent of American foreign
interventions, has feuded with Mr. Trump and his allies for weeks over the war,
which most Americans oppose, according to opinion polls.
He
appeared particularly appalled by a threat Mr. Trump made to Iran on social
media on Easter Sunday that the country would be “living in hell” if it did not
open the Strait of Hormuz, the vital shipping route that has been clogged
during the war. After the post, Mr. Carlson urged White House officials to
stand up to the president, saying that Mr. Trump’s behavior was “evil.”
Mr. Trump
fired back at Mr. Carlson and other conservative critics of the war in a
lengthy Truth Social post two weeks ago, describing them as “Fools” and
suggesting that Mr. Carlson should “see a good psychiatrist.” In the post, Mr.
Trump said that Mr. Carlson, who was dismissed by Fox News in 2023, had “never
been the same” after he left the network.
Asked for
comment on Mr. Carlson’s remarks, the White House pointed to Mr. Trump’s social
media commentary.
On
Friday, Mr. Trump continued to lob insults at Mr. Carlson on social media,
writing that “Tucker is a Low IQ person — Always easy to beat, and highly
overrated.”
One of
the president’s allies, the far-right activist Laura Loomer, wrote on social
media on Monday that Mr. Carlson was “trying to hand our country over to the
Democrats.”
Mr.
Carlson, a right-wing brawler prone to spreading conspiratorial views, was once
Fox News’s most popular prime-time host, and his TV program was all but
mandatory for many conservatives during Mr. Trump’s first term.
But he
was ousted by Fox News after it agreed to pay $787.5 million to resolve a
lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems over the network’s promotion of 2020
election misinformation. The case exposed instances in which Mr. Carlson
denigrated colleagues and privately attacked Mr. Trump. In a text from Jan. 4,
2021, that the case surfaced, Mr. Carlson wrote of Mr. Trump, “I hate him
passionately.”
By 2024,
Mr. Carlson had re-emerged as a popular podcaster and smoothed out tensions
with Mr. Trump. Mr. Carlson was among those who lobbied Mr. Trump to choose JD
Vance as his running mate.
When Mr.
Trump made a dramatic appearance at the Republican National Convention in July
2024, days after he was shot in the ear at a rally in Butler, Pa., Mr. Carlson
was the first person to greet him.
Cameras
later captured the two chuckling together in Mr. Trump’s box at the convention
in Milwaukee. From the stage of the convention, Mr. Carlson described Mr. Trump
as “the funniest person I have ever met in my life.”
“He’s a
wonderful person,” Mr. Carlson said. “I know him well.”


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