No, not about any of his traditional political opinions (sorry for trolling!), but for saying this:
"some people [are mad], sure. That’s OK, you know, listen the idea of freedom of speech is you can’t demand freedom of speech and then say, ‘But don’t say bad things about me.‘”“That’s the deal, you have to take your stand if you believe in it,” he continued. “Take a stand, stand for it and then deal with the consequences. That’s the rules, so when people criticize me — they criticized me for my stance against the war 20 years ago, people picketed my movies and they put me on a deck of cards — I have to take that, that’s fair. I’m OK with that, I’m OK with criticism for where I stand. I defend their right to criticize me as much as I defend my right to criticize them.”
That's something almost no one on the traditional left/right ever seem to get, and man do I wish more folks understood that free speech included people being able to criticize you.
(Man, do I also wish more folks understood free speech, period.)
The other thing he's been right about recently (because broken clocks get two a day) has been that now that he's in his '60s, maybe he's not the guy who should be the romantic lead opposite twenty-somethings. Only other leading actor I know of who made that stance was John Wayne (to the chagrin of John Ford, who kept wanting to cast him in romance subplots), likely the single point of overlap between the two.