A chorus of high-profile right-wing figureheads, including Tucker Carlson, Alex Jones and Megyn Kelly, recently criticized President Donald Trump’s ongoing Iran war. Trump responded by denouncing them as “nut jobs” and “troublemakers” in a lengthy social media statement, essentially making them persona non-MAGA. And as the president struggles to contain blowback from his Middle Eastern adventurism, the MAGA fault lines are only growing.
‘Biggest break thus far’ After these notable conservatives denounced the president’s actions, Trump responded with a “blistering” 482-word Truth Social post that insulted them in “starkly personal terms,” said The New York Times. Carlson, Jones, Kelly and former Charlie Kirk collaborator Candace Owens are the “opposite of MAGA,” said Trump.
The president has “repeatedly dismissed suggestions” of an alleged “fissure in his MAGA coalition,” said Forbes. But after Trump “threatened to wipe out Iranian civilization,” there’s a “growing schism” in his base over the war, particularly given his campaign pledge of “no new wars,” said NBC News.
While Carlson in particular has been “highly critical” of the Iran conflict and “somewhat more gently critical of Trump the man, at least publicly,” the “gloves were off” this week “like never before,” said CNN. The result is “perhaps the biggest break thus far” between Trump and a “leading conservative influencer.”
‘Deep anger’ and ‘quick rebukes’ Trump’s attacks on this batch of newly minted detractors reflect what seems to be a “deep anger at criticism from once-loyal supporters,” said Politico. This opprobrium runs both ways, as the targets of his ire offered “quick rebukes” to Trump’s attacks. “It may be time to put Grandpa up in a home,” said Owens on X. “I’m just so sad that whatever has happened to him has totally changed the man he once was,” said Jones in a video response on the same platform.
Iran has “emerged as a growing weakness for Trump,” said CNN. While some MAGA supporters are “overwhelmingly on board,” the president’s wider base is “increasingly on a different page.” For Trump, the danger in rebukes by Carlson and other media figures is that it gives Republicans “skeptical of the war license to tilt into outright opposition to him.”
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