Rush Limbaugh, conservative oracle or opportunist?
Rush Limbaugh, the conservative icon who entrenched himself in the political discourse heard on American radio waves for over 30 years, died this morning from complications related to lung cancer.
Limbaugh's wife Kathryn announced his death over the air. Limbaugh was 70 years old.
Last February, former President Donald J. Trump awarded Limbaugh the Presidential Medal of Freedom during the State of the Union address. First Lady Melania Trump fastened the medal to Limbaugh who saluted the President from the House gallery.
The nation's highest civilian honor came one day after the conservative radio host informed his listeners he was battling advanced-stage lung cancer.
"I wish I didn't have to tell you this, and I thought about not telling anybody," Limbaugh told his radio audience about the diagnosis last year. "I thought about trying to do this without anybody knowing, 'cause I don't like making things about me. But there are going to be days that I'm not gonna be able to be here because I'm undergoing treatment or I'm reacting to treatment, and I know that that would inspire all kinds of curiosity with people wondering what's going on."
The loquacious Limbaugh was never one to shy from controversy and sometimes created it himself.
Limbaugh accused actor Michael J. Fox of exaggerating the effects of Parkinson's disease in 2006. The actor appeared in political commercials on behalf of candidates who supported stem cell research.
In 2012, Limbaugh called Georgetown University Law student Sandra Fluke a "slut" and "prostitute" following her congressional testimony about access to female contraceptives on certain college campuses. The comments prompted some advertisers to end their affiliation with "The Rush Limbaugh Show."
In 1991, 60 Minutes correspondent Steve Kroft profiled Limbaugh and pressed the host on some of his contentious opinions.
Kroft: People have called you a sexist.
Limbaugh: Right.
Kroft: People have called you a homophobe.
Limbaugh: Right.
Kroft: Are you?
Limbaugh: Of course not. I'm none of those things. I am--I am simply someone who views events in life and comments on them. I have my own version of what's right and wrong.
Kroft: You've also been called arrogant and pompous.
Limbaugh: Well, I call it confidence.