Here's a summary of the Tucker Carlson interview with Carrie Prejean Boller (uploaded March 13, 2026, on the Tucker Carlson channel):
Title: Are Christians Required to Pledge Loyalty to Bibi Netanyahu? Carrie Prejean Boller & Tucker Respond.
The interview centers on Carrie Prejean Boller's (former Miss California, Christian conservative activist, and Catholic) recent appointment to President Trump's
Religious Liberty Commission (around April/May 2025) and her subsequent removal/ousting from it.
Key points and timeline discussed:
- Carrie was appointed to the commission, which was presented as focused on protecting religious freedom in the U.S.
- Tensions quickly arose because some commissioners (notably Paula White, Dan Patrick, and others) pushed a strong pro-Israel / Christian Zionist stance. They reportedly pressured members to avoid criticizing Israel, Zionism, Benjamin Netanyahu's government, or discussing Palestinian suffering in Gaza.
- Carrie posted on social media about Gaza (referring to events there as genocide) and referenced statements from Pope Leo (or similar Catholic authority) on Palestinian Christian suffering. This led to accusations that she was anti-Semitic.
- A major flashpoint was the question of whether anti-Zionism equals anti-Semitism, and whether Christians are theologically required to support modern Israel / Netanyahu as a matter of faith (she argues no).
- The commission held a hearing on anti-Semitism, but critics (including Carrie) said it was stacked — it excluded witnesses like non-Zionist Jews or Palestinian Christians, and focused heavily on equating criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism.
- Carrie was removed after the hearing for refusing to back down on her views. She describes receiving strange/dark phone calls and pressure, including a bizarre meeting involving Dan Patrick and Paula White.
- She contrasts replacement theology (supersessionism — the idea that the Church replaced Israel in God's plan) with what she sees as the commission's implied theology (strong dispensationalist Christian Zionism that treats modern Israel as having special divine status Christians must support).
- Tucker and Carrie discuss whether her removal was timed/preparatory for potential escalation toward war with Iran (speculative angle raised in the conversation).
- She expresses disappointment that prominent Catholic leaders (e.g., mentions of Bishop Barron, Cardinal Dolan) privately supported her but refused to speak out publicly.
- Broader themes: religious freedom hypocrisy, the blending of faith with political loyalty to a foreign government, attacks on her by other commissioners, why Gaza/war topics are taboo in such circles, and her public feud with figures like Seth Dillon.
- Carrie emphasizes she won't compromise core Christian beliefs for any political appointment — even one tied to the President — and portrays herself as standing firm for truth despite backlash.
The interview is sympathetic to Carrie's perspective, framing the commission as a "sham" when it comes to genuine religious liberty, especially if it demands ideological conformity on Israel/Zionism. It runs about 1 hour 40 minutes, with chapters covering Paula White's role, replacement theology, the hearing, anti-Zionism vs. anti-Semitism, and why Christian leaders stayed silent.
Overall message: Carrie argues no version of Christian doctrine requires pledging loyalty to Benjamin Netanyahu or any modern political state — and that forcing such loyalty undermines true religious freedom.