Natalie Kitroff
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So this Tucker Fuentes interview obviously touched a nerve over divisions on the question of the U.S.
relationship with Israel and anti-Semitism and whether there is tolerance for blatant anti-Semitism in the conservative movement.
And I'm curious where Trump sits in all of this, Robert, because he's obviously maintained a very close alliance with Israel, but he's also been known to have a meal with Nick Fuentes.
So where is Trump on this?
And what does this whole saga tell us about his vulnerability on this issue?
And it sounds like it's connected to a kind of broader question that's being asked about Trump's priorities in general.
The focus on foreign affairs, on foreign conflicts, to potentially the detriment of a focus on domestic issues.
I mean, there's a political logic to what Carlson is saying here.
One of the main issues driving Trump's election was the economy.
And so I imagine there's a lot of people who feel like they voted for him because they expected Trump as president to have a laser-like focus on pocketbook issues rather than on mediating conflicts in far-flung places, which is something he's done a lot of in his first year.
And at the same time, you know, spending money on things that a lot of people took issue with, a ballroom, for example.
And we will talk about her right after the break.
Robert, you brought up Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia, and her evolution really feels emblematic of this break with Trump that we're starting to see among some on the right.
Obviously, she became famous for being one of Trump's closest allies, and now she has since announced her resignation from office and said pretty explicitly that Trump is betraying the movement.
So let's talk about this journey that Marjorie Taylor Greene has been on.
It wasn't being rewarded.
Yeah, I mean, this was a pretty frontal attack by Trump.
So how does Greene respond?