Democracy Dies in Darkness

On Fox News, Steve Doocy has become the unexpected voice of dissent

The affable longtime ‘Fox & Friends’ host is shaking things up in the morning, sparring with colleagues and challenging GOP orthodoxy, to the dismay of Donald Trump and other Republican leaders

Updated March 22, 2024 at 4:27 p.m. EDT|Published March 18, 2024 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
Steve Doocy, on set in August at Fox News studios in New York, has become more critical of Republicans, including former president Donald Trump, over the past year on “Fox & Friends.” (Roy Rochlin/Getty Images)
9 min

It was just after 6 a.m., and Steve Doocy was already going against the grain.

“We don’t have any privacy!” his “Fox & Friends” co-host Ainsley Earhardt was fretting.

“It’s unbelievable!” concurred another co-host, Lawrence Jones.

Their outrage was sparked during that mid-January broadcast by a new allegation that federal officials had asked banks to monitor purchases from outdoors-gear retailers like Dick’s Sporting Goods — in an effort to flag potential extremists who might have participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection. On a network like Fox News that employs pundits who have downplayed the violence at the U.S. Capitol, this was troubling stuff. Earhardt deemed such scrutiny “an invasion”; a fourth co-host, Brian Kilmeade, mused about government intimidation.