Times Colonist

U.S. conservati­ves love Trump

Bannon rips ‘opposition party’ news media

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

NATIONAL HARBOR, United States — U.S. President Donald Trump will arrive as the conquering hero in a roomful of conservati­ves today, as he celebrates skyhigh approval ratings among the right wing after his first month in office.

It seemed far from assured last year. Trump, who once proposed single-payer health care, supported abortion, and who still threatens businesses that export jobs, took veiled shots during his presidenti­al bid at rigid conservati­sm.

”This is called the Republican party, not the conservati­ve party,” Trump said. Last year, his appearance at the conservati­ve movement’s premier annual event was controvers­ial enough that Trump cancelled it.

Now he’ll be the featured guest at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference today.

Trump will be bringing with him low approval ratings for a new president — just not on the right. He’s wildly popular there. A Quinnipiac survey this week gives him anemic 38 per cent approval nationwide but, among self-identified Republican­s, it’s flipped around — 83 per cent.

Republican­s viewed him as honest, level-headed, intelligen­t, a good leader, and someone who cares about people — qualities that non-Republican­s and independen­ts did not ascribe to him.

Trump’s chief of staff, Reince Priebus, cited several moves in his first month for cementing the bond with conservati­ves. He told the conference about one in particular: the nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.

“It establishe­d trust. It establishe­d that Donald Trump was a man of his word,” Priebus said.

There are already snapshots at the conference of how Trump has reshaped the Republican party — more nationalis­t, economical­ly populist, and hardedged.

Event organizers worked to shave off the roughest of those edges.

White nationalis­t leader Richard Spencer was kicked out of the event Thursday. He’s the person who coined the term, “altright,” although one organizer in a speech Thursday sought to wiggle loose of the associatio­n by blaming unnamed leftist fascists for misusing the term.

Spencer was told to leave, despite having a ticket to attend.

The aggressive edge includes a steady series of shots at the media. White House strategist Steve Bannon referred repeatedly to the media as the opposition party, desperate to defend its internatio­nalist agenda: “If you think they’re going to give you your country back without a fight, you are sadly mistaken. Every day — every day, it is going to be a fight.”

And so it was that a media figure who earns $29 million US a year — Fox News’ Trump-boosting Sean Hannity — spent much his appearance lambasting other journalist­s as overpaid, corrupt, incompeten­t and lazy.

He tossed footballs into the crowd and asked people to grade Trump’s first month: “A-plus!” several people shouted, amid cheers. One young man in the crowd shouted jokes about media controvers­ies involving false statements from the White House: “Alternativ­e facts rock!”

The woman who made that phrase famous walked onto the stage to cheers: “Kelly-anne! Kelly-anne!” people chanted, as she walked out. Kellyanne Conway touched her heart as one woman shouted, “Kellyanne, you’re doing great!”

Hannity listed ways Trump has delivered for conservati­ves.

“Vetting [of immigrants] is conservati­ve. The wall [with Mexico is] conservati­ve. Repealing and replacing is conservati­ve. The economic plan is right out of Reagan. His building a strong national defence? Taking care of our vets. Handing education back to the states. Energy independen­ce. What part of that is not conservati­ve?”

 ??  ?? White House strategist Stephen Bannon, left, and chief of staff Reince Priebus are introduced to speak Thursday at the Conserva- tive Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Maryland.
White House strategist Stephen Bannon, left, and chief of staff Reince Priebus are introduced to speak Thursday at the Conserva- tive Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Maryland.

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