📰 Full Story
Conservative commentator Tucker Carlson issued a public apology for his role in promoting Donald Trump, saying he was “sorry for misleading people” and that he will be “tormented” by his support.
The mea culpa came in a podcast conversation with his brother, Buckley Carlson, in an episode published April 20 and widely reported on April 21, 2026.
Carlson said he and others who rallied for Trump were “implicated” in the president’s return to power and voiced sharp criticism of Trump’s conduct, especially the administration’s decision to wage war in Iran and what Carlson termed the president’s “vile” rhetoric.
The break with Trump has widened as other right-wing figures have also become critical; Trump fired back on his social platform with personal insults toward Carlson and others.
The apology has drawn swift reaction across the media — from cable and entertainment shows to political commentators — with some dismissing Carlson’s words as insincere and others treating it as a notable fracture within the conservative media ecosystem that helped elect Trump.
🔗 Based On
New York Daily NewsTucker Carlson turns on Trump, apologizes for ‘misleading people’
The Hollywood ReporterTucker Carlson Apologizes for Backing Trump as Rift Deepens
🤝 Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Carlson's apology is widely perceived as strategic rather than repentant, set against the factual backdrop of Fox's Dominion settlement and his 2023 ouster; many expect a tactical repositioning to remain influential in a post‑Trump right.







💬 Commentary