Bill O'Reilly has predicted that Tucker Carlson’s departure from Fox News could negatively affect the 2024 presidential race for Republicans.
The host of the eponymous Fox News primetime show “Tucker Carlson Tonight” parted ways with the cable news network Monday despite consistently garnering one of the network’s largest audience bases.
O'Reilly, a former Fox News host who also parted ways with the network in 2017, said Carlson’s departure “will have a tremendous effect on the future of the Fox News channel, no doubt about that, but more importantly on Republican politics in the 2024 presidential election.”
“The Republican profile in the media is much less now, and that will have an effect on mostly independent voters because the ... word won’t get out as fast—whatever the word may be,” O'Reilly said.
While Fox News still has other conservative commentators like Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham, O‘Reilly argued that it cannot simply be assumed that Carlson’s particular brand of conservatism will transfer over to other sections of Fox News, which he indicated is somewhat fragmented. O’Reilly said that instead of a tightly structured operation, the network now had internal “fiefdoms,” and that essentially, “each show did its own thing.”
Carlson had consciously decided to appeal to an audience of what O'Reilly called the “committed right” or “committed conservatives,” he said.
“Committed conservatives, they’re different than casual conservatives, they’re right there every day, okay, [they] want to know what is going on,” O'Reilly said.
However, O'Reilly said Carlson had also leaned somewhat into speculation on a number of conspiracy theories.
Other Commentators Say Carlson Doesn’t Need Fox News
While O'Reilly predicted Carlson’s departure would diminish the reach of his particular brand of conservative viewpoints, other news media commentators suggested Carlson will have a powerful reach outside of Fox News.“This is just my supposition, that he‘ll go independent like I have,” said Kelly, who has gone on to host her own satellite radio show and podcast since parting ways with Fox News. “He will no longer answer to a corporate master. He will be free to say whatever he wants to say, within the bounds of defamation law, of course, and he’ll be totally unleashed.”
“And [Carlson] leaves directly from his prime-time post, so he will have a massive audience that will be looking to hear him and follow him,” Kelly added. “And I think if you look at what’s happening online already, there are a lot of Fox News fans who say, ‘He was the only reason I was still watching Fox, and now you’ve taken that away.’”
Other news networks have also indicated they would be interested in bringing Carlson on board.
“We would love to have you here, you won’t miss a beat, and together, two of us will tear it up—just tear it up,” Beck said.