The Lincoln Project publishes an ‘In Memoriam’ of Tucker Carlson with 10 full seconds of laughter

For those who have faced off against former Fox News host Tucker Carlson over the years, his downfall is now bringing his detractors together to dance on the grave of his Fox News career.

The Lincoln Project, a group of anti-Donald Trump former Republicans, collected some of their favorite clips of Carlson’s conspiracy theories that he promoted on his nightly prime-time show. Everything from his promotion of the white nationalistgreat replacement theory” to his war against M&Ms for the cartoons‘ outfits and perceived gender of the candy with no gender.

Set to peaceful music, the In Memoriam segment says goodbye to Carlson but closes with a number of clips of Carlson laughing, making it appear as though Carlson is laughing at his own downfall.

Those promoting the video are using a number of Tucker-related puns such as “Tuck off” and “he tucked around and found out.” Meanwhile, conservatives tweeting the video are heralding the clips as Carlson’s best moments.

See the full video below or at the link here.

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Trump personally begged MAGA ally not to primary GOP lawmaker — but failed



President Donald Trump failed to keep a Republican primary clear for one of his MAGA allies in his home state of New York.

The president personally called attorney Bruce Blakeman, the county executive for Nassau County, to persuade him not to run in the GOP gubernatorial primary against Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY), saying polling indicated she was the favorite to face off against Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul, but he entered the race anyway, reported New York Magazine.

“He’s great, and she’s great,” Trump said after Blakeman announced his candidacy. “They’re both great people.”

However, sources told the magazine that Trump believes Blakeman will lose the primary but doesn't want to publicly come out against him, and New York Republicans say the situation reminds them of the 2022 GOP primary, when Lee Zeldin had to spend much of his campaign money to win a fairly uncompetitive race before losing that November.

“He ran a hell of a race against Kathy Hochul, as close as anyone’s come in a generation,” said one New York Republican operative. “Can we say for sure that, if not for the primary, he wins? No, we can’t say that, but boy, he’d have had a better shot.”

Blakeman may not appear on the ballot unless he wins the support of 25 percent of attendees at the party’s February convention, where Stefanik will likely have many allies, or obtains 15,000 valid signatures from registered Republicans across the state.