Donald Trumps post-presidency return to public speaking is finally confirmed. Blessed with his presence will be the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, the annual convention that pulls together the USs right-wing elite to strut their stuff or blow off steam, depending on their mood.
Now approaching its 50th birthday, CPAC is a project of the American Conservative Union, one of the USs oldest right-wing lobby groups. Designed to bring together conservatives from all over the country to exchange ideas and forge useful relationships, its ostensible main function today is to galvanise the movements disparate groups around their shared issues.
But the conference also has other key functions: it helps sharpen the line between establishment and counter-establishment, tightens the connections between Republican officials and the partys donor class and interest groups, and gives rising stars a chance to show off as they climb the ladder.
On that last point, this years schedule features some telltale names: South Dakota governor Kristi Noem, Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton, Texas Senator Ted Cruz and Missouri Senator Josh Hawley all have solo speaking slots. But with Mr Trump the headline slot on the final day, the four of them are for now being kept firmly in line.
The conference has always been a useful platform for airing out the rights culture war grievances, albeit in an upbeat spirit. Regular speakers over the years have included not just elected officials but leaders from the NRA and other conservative pressure groups, Fox News pundits, and the likes of Ann Coulter, a right-wing provocateur known for adopting incendiary views on race and immigration.
Some of the speakers and groups attending have gone even further beyond the fringe, periodically threatening to derail the conferences reputation. In 2017, CPAC was forced to disinvite Milo Yiannopoulos over remarks he made about intergenerational sex (though his previous antisemitic, racist and misogynistic statements had been no problem).
Its also an ideal stage for Republicans looking to maintain or salvage their national profiles, or at least to stay in touch with the base between election cycles. Back in 2013, coming off Barack Obamas victory over the relatively mainstream campaign fought by Mitt Romney, proto-Trump Tea Party heroine Sarah Palin not yet relegated to has-been status gave one of her reliably earthy, free-associative speeches.
Hes got the rifle, Ive got the rack, she quipped as she discussed her and her husbands Christmas gifts. Then she pulled from under the podium an extra-large Big Gulp cup full of an unidentified substance and took a sip. Venting their rage at Michael Bloombergs proposed cap on large-size soda servings, the crowd went wild.
Sure, its just pop with low-cal ice cubes in it! Ms Palin riffed. I hope thats okay.
Contained in that brief moment is everything that CPAC has become: a forum for venting cultural and political grievance, a chance for leaders to shore up their credibility, and a multi-day rally that gets useful TV coverage for a cheering conservative crowd.
The priorities of the conservative movement shifted radically over the course of the second Obama term. A month into Mr Trumps presidency, the CPAC of 2017 saw Steve Bannon, the far-right co-mastermind of Mr Trumps victory, take the stage for a rare public appearance where he laid the administrations agenda bare for all to see.
Talking of economic nationalism and the imperative to defend sovereignty at all costs, Mr Bannon explained that Mr Trumps cabinet had been chosen to spearhead the deconstruction of the administrative state in favour of consolidated executive power.
But he also laid out the nationalistic creed to which Mr Trump openly pandered as he steadily took over the Republican Party: We are a nation with a culture and a reason for being.
It was at CPACs 2011 meeting, in fact, that Mr Trump gave his first major political speech. At the time, he was aggressively pushing the racist fiction that Mr Obama was not born in the US and therefore could not be considered a legitimate president; on the stage, he took digs at the candidates lined up for the next election and ranted about issues that would animate his campaign when it kicked off four years later, in particular trade with China.
Nine years on, he gave a rambling address to the conference just as the US was starting to feel the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. And not long after the conference closed, it became clear that at least one guest had tested positive for Covid-19.
Read more from the original source:
Trump returns: How CPAC could fire the starting pistol for the 2024 White House race - The Independent