Tucker Carlson regrets his 2021 interview with white nationalist Nick Fuentes. That's the headline from his New York Times sit-down, where the former Fox News host unpacked his fractured relationship with Donald Trump and walked back some of his most inflammatory rhetoric.
Carlson and Trump have split over Iran policy, a rift significant enough that the host felt compelled to address it publicly. He also clarified previous comments where he'd suggested Trump possessed "Antichrist" qualities, framing those remarks as exaggerated in the moment.
The interview touches his current standing with conservative institutions. Carlson's relationship with Turning Point and figures like Erika Kirk appears strained or complicated enough to warrant explanation. His departure from Fox last year left him seeking new platforms, and these revelations suggest he's recalibrating how he's perceived within the Republican ecosystem.
What's notable is Carlson's willingness to express regret. The Fuentes interview was divisive even among conservatives, and acknowledging it signals either genuine reflection or a calculated repositioning. Either way, his comments reveal someone reassessing past choices as he navigates a post-Fox existence where his influence remains real but his institutional backing has evaporated.
