This article analyzes Joe Rogan's evolving relationship with Donald Trump. Initially endorsing Trump before the 2024 election, Rogan has since publicly criticized Trump's policies on several key issues.
These criticisms contrast sharply with Rogan's previous endorsement, which Trump himself acknowledged and celebrated.
The article suggests that Rogan doesn't align strictly with any political party. He claims to support candidates based on individual policies, irrespective of party affiliation. Rogan has previously expressed liberal views and even hinted at supporting Bernie Sanders in the past.
Rogan's critics have accused him of inconsistency and irresponsibility, arguing that his initial endorsement lent undeserved credibility to Trump. However, the article argues that Rogan's recent critiques are not entirely unexpected, given his history of independent political views.
When Joe Rogan threw his weight behind President Donald Trump with a shock endorsement on the eve of the 2024 election, it was seen as the final nail in Kamala Harrisās coffin.
Rogan has a combined 52.5 million followers on Spotify, Instagram and YouTube and is beloved by young men, the very demographic Trump was seeking to win over in the final days of his campaign.
But just five months later, Trumpās most influential supporter seems to be having second thoughts, explosively breaking from Trump on three key issues.
In recent weeks, Rogan has slammed the Trump administrationās tariffs on Canada as āridiculousā, its deportation policies as āhorrificā, and its handling of the war secrets group chat scandal as āso dumbā.
The clashes started in March, when Rogan, 57, used his podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience, to rant about Trump imposing tariffs on Canada and his desire to make Canada the 51st state.
'I can't believe there is anti-American, anti-Canadian sentiment going on. It's the dumbest f****** feud,ā Rogan said during the March 14 episode.ā 'I just want America and Canada to get along, I think it's ridiculous. And I don't think they should be our 51st state.'
A week later, Rogan took things a step further, slamming Trumpās approach to the mass deportation of immigrants, after reports emerged that innocent people had been mistakenly rounded up and thrown into maximum security prisons in El Salvador alongside gang members and criminals.
'You got to get scared that people who are not criminals are getting, like, lassoed up and deported and sent to, like, El Salvador prisons,ā Rogan said. 'This is kind of crazy that that could be possible. That's horrific. And that's, again, that's bad for the cause.'
When Joe Rogan threw his weight behind President Donald Trump with a shock endorsement on the eve of the 2024 election, it was seen as the final nail in Kamala Harrisās coffin. (Joe Rogan and Donald Trump are pictured at a UFC event).Ā
In the same episode he bashed Trumpās handling of the Signal-gate scandal, which saw top Trump officials mistakenly include the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic in a group chat where they shared sensitive information about an impending strike on Houthi rebels.
Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and has fiercely defended the officials involved.
Rogan was disappointed by his response, which he said appeared to be a case of: 'Never admit your fault. Never admit you're wrong.'
'Thatās such a crazy mistake,' Rogan ranted, adding: āThatās such a checks-and-balances mistake. Like, double-check, yes. Itās like, you know, when you go on the road, like, do I have my toothbrush?ā
The White House has stayed silent in the face of the criticisms and refused to comment on the growing rift between Trump and Rogan when approached by the Daily Mail.
The recent clashes are a sharp contrast to the two men's cozy alliance in the days leading up to the election, when Rogan welcomed both Trump and āFirst Buddyā Elon Musk onto his podcast.
Sharing his interview with Musk on X on November 4, Rogan wrote: āThe great and powerful @elonmusk. If it wasnāt for him weād be f****d. He makes what I think is the most compelling case for Trump youāll hear, and I agree with him every step of the way.ā
āFor the record, yes, thatās an endorsement of Trump. Enjoy the podcast,ā he added.
Trump, who was onstage in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for his penultimate rally at the time, was thrilled.
āIt just came over the wires that Joe Rogan just endorsed me, is that great,ā he said. āThank you, Joe. Thatās so nice. And he doesnāt do that, he doesnāt do that stuff.ā
Rogan's own naysayers have been quick to leap on his apparent repositioning from Trump supporter to critic, lambasting him for a stance that they deemed āirresponsibleā from the get-go.
On Monday, author Sam Harris slammed Rogan for what appears to some to be his about-face on Trumpās policies, saying that Rogan himself had āhelped put [Trumpās] lies into the most plausible possible shapeā by having him on the podcast right before the election.
āIt is irresponsible. I mean, it is directly harmful,ā Harris added, āOur society is as politically shattered as it is in part because of how Joe has interacted with information.ā
But, while Roganās critics may crow, the truth is that, on closer examination, the podcasterās recent critiques of Trump are less of a shock than some would have us believe.
Rogan has always claimed to have a voice entirely his own. He has never strongly aligned himself with any political party and has historically supported a huge range of policies.
In recent weeks, Rogan has slammed the Trump administrationās tariffs on Canada as āridiculousā, its deportation policies as āhorrificā, and its handling of the war secrets group chat scandal as āso dumbā.
Indeed, Rogan has consistently rejected the notion that he is a Republican and, in the lead-up to the 2020 Democratic primaries he even seemed to endorse Bernie Sanders, saying: āIāll probably vote for him⦠I like him a lot.ā
In 2022 he re-iterated his liberal beliefs, saying: āI was on welfare as a kid. I think itās important. I think having a social safety net is crucial. We should help each other. Weāre supposed to be one big community. Iām a bleeding-heart liberal when it comes to a lot of s**t.'
Instead of being aligned with one party, Rogan claims to choose who he supports based purely on their views and policies.
āI donāt consider myself a Republican. I donāt consider myself a Democrat, either,ā said Rogan in January, āI consider myself an American.ā
āThe idea that I have to ignore things that make sense to me because itās coming from the wrong team is just stupid,ā he added.
As we have seen in the last five months, his approach makes it all but impossible to predict what - and indeed who - he is going to support from one issue to the next.
Itās anyoneās guess. Which leaves us with only one way to find out: tune into his podcast and see what he says next.
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