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James Lindsay Claims Trump Administration Heavily Infiltrated by Radical Right-Wing Faction

Dave Rubin Report · Trump Doesn’t See How New Threat Could Unravel MAGA | James Lindsay · July 6, 2026
James Lindsay Claims Trump Administration Heavily Infiltrated by Radical Right-Wing Faction
Dave Rubin Report
Dave Rubin Report
Trump Doesn’t See How New Threat Could Unravel MAGA | James Lindsay
"I do think he's aware. I do not think he's a part of it. I do think however that his administration is pretty heavily infiltrated by players that do think this way. And I know that that's some tension within within the administration."
Conservative intellectual James Lindsay told Dave Rubin that while President Trump is not part of a radical right-wing movement seeking to transform American governance, his administration has been significantly infiltrated by these actors. Lindsay suggests this faction, centered around figures like Tucker Carlson, seeks fundamental change to America's constitutional order, possibly replacing it with a system involving monarchy, limited aristocracy, and collectivist economics based on what they call the common good. He claims tensions exist within the administration over this direction.

About this episode

Dave Rubin interviews James Lindsay, founder of New Discourses, about what Lindsay describes as a dangerous unmasking of radical factions on both the political left and right. Lindsay's most explosive claims center on the Trump administration and Vice President JD Vance. He alleges that Trump's administration has been heavily infiltrated by a radical right-wing movement seeking fundamental transformation of American governance, though he believes Trump himself is not part of this faction. Lindsay directly links Vance to Patrick Deneen's 2023 book 'Regime Change,' which he says calls for replacing American constitutional democracy with a system combining monarchy, limited aristocracy, limited republican democracy, and collectivist economics. Lindsay identifies Tucker Carlson as the center of gravity for this movement, which he claims has accelerated its activities since the murder of Charlie Kirk. He argues this network seeks to replace liberal constitutional order with what they call 'common good conservatism,' which Lindsay characterizes as collectivism. On the Israel issue, Lindsay dismisses the faction's focus on Israel and Jews as scapegoating designed to exploit isolationist sentiment and divide conservatives. He suggests Trump may be aware of these dynamics and playing a strategic game, though Lindsay admits some uncertainty. Lindsay expresses cautious optimism about America's direction overall, particularly around the 250th anniversary celebrations, but warns the country remains in a dangerous position. The conversation reveals deep fractures within the conservative movement between traditional MAGA supporters and what Lindsay characterizes as a radical authoritarian faction seeking to fundamentally reshape American governance away from its founding principles.

Key takeaways

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