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Tucker Carslon, the Great Replacement theory and Viktor Orban - and why you should be worried

The Fox News presenter uses his prominence to push worrying ideas

June 20, 2022 14:35
GettyImages-1322157897 (1)
ESZTERGOM, HUNGARY - AUGUST 07: Tucker Carlson speaks during the Mathias Corvinus Collegium (MCC) Feszt on August 7, 2021 in Esztergom, Hungary. The multiday political event was organized by the Mathias Corvinus Collegium (MCC), a privately managed foundation that recently received more than $1.7 billion in government money and assets. The leader of its main board, Balazs Orban, who is also a state secretary in the prime minister's office, said MCC's priority is promoting "patriotism" among the next generation of Hungary's leaders. (Photo by Janos Kummer/Getty Images)
6 min read

Last month, a gunman walked into a supermarket in the East Side neighbourhood of Buffalo in New York state and opened fire on the predominantly black shoppers. Eighteen-year-old Payton Gendron, who has been charged with first-degree murder, was wearing body armour and a military grade helmet, and carrying a modified Bushmaster XM-15 rifle. Five minutes after the attack began, the gunman surrendered to police: 13 people, 11 of them black, lay wounded, 10 of them fatally.

It doesn’t require an investigative journalist to discern the suspect’s motives. An 180-page manifesto he allegedly posted online drips with antisemitism, racism and white nationalism. Declaring his support for neo-Nazism, the author parroted the key tenets of the “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory which holds that “global elites” are using immigration to supplant the white race. Although he had deliberately targeted black Americans, the suspected gunman wrote, Jews were “the biggest problem” and could be “dealt with in time”.

Curiously, despite spending more than three decades in journalism, the host of America’s most popular cable news show chose to skate over these facts. Instead, Tucker Carlson, the host of Fox News’ nightly political talk show, said the Buffalo gunman’s manifesto was “not really political at all” and dismissed talk of his motives by suggesting the teenager was “mentally ill”.

This omission is even more strange considering Mr Carlson’s familiarity with the various iterations of the replacement theory. As the New York Times reported a month before the Buffalo shooting, the right-wing commentator “amplified the idea that a cabal of elites want to force demographic change through immigration” in more than 400 episodes of his show.

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