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Trump Social Media Strategist Reveals He Rejected $20 Million in Foreign Contracts

Tucker Carlson Show · Trump’s Social Media Advisor Reveals All: Epstein, Iran, and Mark Levin’s Israeli Propaganda · June 26, 2026
Trump Social Media Strategist Reveals He Rejected $20 Million in Foreign Contracts
Tucker Carlson Show
Tucker Carlson Show
Trump’s Social Media Advisor Reveals All: Epstein, Iran, and Mark Levin’s Israeli Propaganda
"I do not take any foreign money. I don't take any money from the Gulf countries. I don't take any money from India. I don't take any money from Russia, China, no, no foreign countries. Uh, how much would you make if you wanted to? I've probably rejected close to $20 million in contracts over the last 15 months."
Alex Brusowitz disclosed that he has turned down approximately $20 million in foreign contracts over 15 months, including a direct approach in June 2025 from an Israeli foundation seeking to hire him for social media strategy related to Iran. At age 29, Brusowitz says he refuses all foreign money as Trump's social media strategist despite significant financial offers from Gulf countries, India, Russia, and China, distinguishing himself from competitors in Washington who accept such arrangements.

About this episode

Tucker Carlson hosted Alex Brusowitz, Trump's 29-year-old social media strategist, for an explosive discussion centered on alleged foreign influence operations targeting the Trump administration's Iran policy. Brusowitz made several major revelations, most significantly that former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale is being paid $46 million annually by Israel through a FARA filing to integrate pro-Israel messaging into Salem Media Network properties and coordinate influencer campaigns across social media platforms. Brusowitz disclosed he personally rejected approximately $20 million in foreign contracts over 15 months, including a direct Israeli approach in June 2025 to conduct social media operations related to Iran. The conversation extensively covered what Brusowitz characterized as coordinated foreign influence campaigns pressuring the administration to continue the Iran conflict, despite polling showing 67% of Americans support Trump's MOU deal. Carlson and Brusowitz challenged the narrative that anti-war sentiment represents fringe opinion, arguing instead that pro-war voices like Mark Levin, who they note opposed Trump in 2016 and supported DeSantis in 2024, are artificially amplified through paid operations. The episode also addressed the Charlie Kirk assassination, with Carlson revealing he contacted FBI leadership demanding answers about whether individuals who posted apparent foreknowledge on social media had been interviewed, receiving no clear response. Throughout, both men criticized what they view as performative focus on antisemitism while anti-white discrimination remains unaddressed, the dominance of Fox News bookings over podcasts for administration officials, and Republican congressional failures like the inability to pass voter ID legislation. Brusowitz, who grew Marjorie Taylor Greene from 2,000 to 800,000 Twitter followers during her first campaign, provided insider perspective on how social media manipulation shapes perceived public opinion and called for stronger disclosure laws around foreign-funded influence operations across the political spectrum.

Key takeaways

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