• Nick Fuentes launches profanity-laced attack on Mark Levin during Monday Rumble broadcast
  • Rant follows Fuentes appearance on Tucker Carlson podcast that sparked Republican division
  • Conservative leaders denounce rhetoric as battle over antisemitism intensifies within GOP

WASHINGTON, D.C. (TDR) — White nationalist and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes called for the deportation of Fox host Mark Levin during an expletive-filled rant Monday, escalating tensions within the Republican Party over antisemitism and the inclusion of far-right voices in mainstream conservative politics.

“I’m furious. I’m absolutely beside myself and furious. The way Mark Levin talks about this country, he should be deported. Not because you’re Jewish, not because you are fat, not because you’re gay, not because you’re a p****. Mark Levin should be deported because of the way he talks about this country,” Fuentes said on his Monday show on Rumble.

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Carlson interview triggers backlash

The outburst came less than a week after Tucker Carlson hosted Fuentes on his podcast in a two-hour interview that sparked widespread criticism from prominent Republicans. During that appearance, Fuentes called Jews “unassimilable” while Carlson offered little pushback, allowing the white nationalist to lay out his vision for a Christian, “pro-white” America.

Levin, a conservative talk radio host known for his fierce support of Israel, responded forcefully to both Carlson and Fuentes during his own show Monday. He vowed that patriots in the Republican Party would root out “the bigots, the racists, the antisemites, the women haters, Black haters, and America haters.”

“You don’t debate them. We patriots have no tolerance for these lowlifes, these Neanderthals. You pick America or the Third Reich.”

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Levin called Fuentes “a punk” and “little Adolf,” while dismissing Carlson as “a nobody” who “got famous on Fox” but “rejected every position he’s ever held.” The radio host also delivered similar remarks at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s Annual Leadership Summit in Las Vegas over the weekend.

GOP splits over platforming extremists

Fuentes has gained increasing influence within segments of the MAGA movement despite his well-documented history of Holocaust denial, praise for Adolf Hitler, and racist rhetoric. The 27-year-old livestreamer presides over the “groyper” movement, a collection of far-right followers who have worked to infiltrate mainstream conservative organizations.

House Speaker Mike Johnson warned Tuesday against giving a platform to antisemitic speech, though he stopped short of directly criticizing Carlson. “I don’t think we should be giving a platform to that speech,” the Louisiana Republican said. “He has a First Amendment right, but we shouldn’t ever amplify it.”

Other prominent conservatives offered sharper rebukes. Daily Wire founder Ben Shapiro spent his entire Monday show excoriating Carlson as “an intellectual coward, a dishonest interlocutor, and a terrible friend.” Senators Ted Cruz and Dan Crenshaw also condemned the interview.

Heritage Foundation defends Carlson

The controversy intensified when Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts defended Carlson in a video statement Thursday, saying the influential think tank would not engage in “canceling our own people.” Roberts claimed critics formed a “venomous coalition” attempting to sow division, though he said he “abhors” some of Fuentes’s statements.

The defense prompted Ryan Neuhaus, Roberts’s chief of staff, to depart the organization Friday. Heritage had previously scrubbed Carlson’s name from its website’s donation page before Roberts issued his statement.

Levin has been a vocal critic of rising isolationist elements in the GOP, including Carlson, whom he nicknamed “Qatarlson” over his anti-Israel stance. During his appearance on Carlson’s show, Fuentes claimed Levin had “radicalized” him on race issues when he listened to the conservative host’s radio program as a high school student.

The escalating feud exposes deepening fractures within Trump’s America First coalition over the boundaries of acceptable political discourse and the role of explicitly antisemitic voices in the conservative movement.

Should mainstream conservative platforms draw the line at hosting white nationalists and Holocaust deniers?

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