Tucker Carlson’s commentary and affect often provoke the question: Is he one of the stupidest people in American public life, or a shameless liar who treats his audience with the utmost contempt? So it is with his Tuesday night’s widely-mocked claim that QAnon, the violent mythology whose adherents participated in the January 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of then-President Donald Trump, does not exist.
“We spent all day trying to locate the famous QAnon, which, in the end, we learned is not even a website,” Carlson snarked while arguing that the left and the media are engaged in the true “disinformation campaign” in this country. “If it's out there, we could not find it.” Last month, Carlson similarly criticized journalists focusing on the “forbidden idea” of “something called QAnon.”
Carlson’s comments are part of a broader pattern in the right-wing media and the Republican Party to recast the horrors of January 6 in a manner less disastrous for their movement. Their lies have helped ensure that a large portion of the party’s base believe a variety of falsehoods and conspiracy theories about that day's events.
It’s worth reviewing Carlson’s take in particular because of his standing as perhaps the most powerful and most-watched Fox host -- and because his show is dedicated to alternately excusing, validating, and denying the existence of the most extreme elements of the right.
Carlson told his viewers on the night of the insurrection, “If you don’t bother to pause and learn a single thing from it, from your citizens storming your Capitol building, then you’re a fool.” Ever since, he’s kept his audience from learning exactly what happened that day. Dumb or insidious? It’s impossible to say for sure.
It was an insurrection.
On January 6, a riotous mob of Trump supporters, many of them armed, overwhelmed law enforcement and stormed the Capitol. They had been drawn to Washington, D.C., by Trump, who had urged them to rally that day against the purportedly rigged election, and spurred on by his speech near the White House denouncing the “theft” and urging the assembled crowd to march on Congress.
Many rioters acknowledged they were trying to prevent the counting of electors under way at the time in order to overturn the election results and keep Trump in office. They breached the building, forcing both the Senate and House to evacuate their chambers; the legislators and then-Vice President Mike Pence narrowly avoided confrontations with the rioters.
More than 250 people have been charged in connection with the attack, which left about 140 law enforcement officers injured. Four people died during the storming, while Capitol Police officer Brian D. Sicknick, who participated in the response, passed away the following day; another Capitol Police officer and one D.C. police officer who also responded to the attack have since died by suicide.
In short, it was an armed insurrection which came perilously close to succeeding.
But not according to Carlson.
It was “a political protest got out of hand after the president recklessly encouraged it,” he told his audience the night after the attack, sneering about how “CNN describes it as an insurrection.”
“It was not an insurrection,” he reiterated to his audience on January 14. “It wasn't an armed invasion by a brigade of dangerous white supremacists. It wasn't. Those are lies.” He also mocked Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) for saying she feared for her life that day.
White supremacists were involved.
At a congressional hearing on Tuesday, top current and former Capitol security officials confirmed that “this attack involved white supremacists and extremist groups.”
Their testimony was consistent with a wealth of reporting about white supremacist partication in the January 6 insurrection. As my colleague Eric Kleefeld noted: