Clive Palmer cries poor in bizarre interview with right-wing journalist Tucker Carlson

Sophia McCaughan
AAP
3 Min Read
Clive Palmer will host a series of interviews with US right-wing journalist Tucker Carlson. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)
Clive Palmer will host a series of interviews with US right-wing journalist Tucker Carlson. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS) Credit: AAP

Times are seemingly tough for mining billionaire Clive Palmer who revealed on Monday that he is looking forward to reaping a profit from his national Freedom Conference tour starring right-wing journalist Tucker Carlson.

In a 40-minute press conference on Monday that could be described as bordering on bizarre, the former federal politician said Carlson, a former Fox News commentator who continues to argue that the 2020 US presidential election was rigged, will not be paid for the series of interviews.

And Mr Palmer said he was looking forward to receiving the profits from the tour’s tickets, which start at $200 a head, because he was “needing the money”.

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

“I’m a poor Australian, you know, I can’t cope,” Mr Palmer said on Monday.

“Business is bad in Australia this year, isn’t that right.”

That was before the man who is building a life-sized replica of the Titanic said he thought the series, which kicks off in June, said the tour was about free speech and that it “will be a non-profit operation, but I think many profits (will be) made out of it”.

“Freedom of choice or difference of opinion is what we’re really talking about,” he said.

The question of whether or not the conference is designed to make money may be up in the air but it is sure to create a publicity stir.

Alongside Mr Carlson, the conference will also include American right-wing political commentator and conspiracy theorist Dinesh D’Souza and Melissa McCann, an Australian COVID-19 sceptic.

But Mr Carlson is undoubtedly the star of the show given his massive profile in the United States where he has even been touted as a possible running mate for former president Donald Trump.

Carlson now runs his own media outlet and broadcasts on X, formerly known as Twitter.

While he recently became the first western journalist to interview Russian President Vladimir Putin since the Ukraine war started, he was also roundly criticised for his soft line of questioning.

Mr Palmer, who has his own political party and spends millions of dollars every election attempting to have his candidates elected, will host the series as the lead interviewer.

And he appears to be looking forward to being the interviewer, saying he intended to hold Carlson to account on a number of issues.

However, he did not elaborate on what he believed those issues would be.

“I’ll be challenging. I’ll have to come up with some hard questions for him,’” Mr Palmer said.

“I’ll be a lot harder on Tucker Carlson, than he was on Vladimir Putin, I promise you that.”

Mr Palmer said he had a busy year coming up with the construction of Titanic II, after re-announcing the idea in March.

The mining tycoon first spruiked the idea of a Titanic II in 2012 and said he expected to soon reveal the completion date of construction.

But that information would be revealed in another press conference.

Comments

Latest Edition

The front page of The Nightly for 17-05-2024

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 17 May 202417 May 2024

Shadowy South American crime figure at centre of alleged gambling scandal that’s rocked Aussie sport.