The Star Malaysia

Once-weary conservati­ves unite under Trump banner

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OXON HILL ( Maryland): Donald Trump’s closest adviser welcomed the US conservati­ve movement’s emphatic embrace of the incoming president, hailing the birth of a new “economic nationalis­m” in America.

“There’s a new political order being formed out of this,” White House chief strategist Steve Bannon told grassroots conservati­ves at an annual confab near the US capital. “Whether you’re a populist, a libertaria­n, economic nationalis­t, we have wide and sometimes diverging opinions but I think the centre core of what we believe” remains, he told the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference.

“We’re a culture and a reason for being and I think that’s what unites us.”

Bannon, who stepped down from running the right-wing Breitbart website last August to head Trump’s campaign, also set the tone for the road ahead, saying “every day is going to be a fight” as the president rolls out his agenda.

Conservati­ves convened at CPAC to hail Trump, a figure once snubbed by the movement but whose victory united and galva-

nised Republican­s.

“It feels like a celebratio­n here!” Heritage Foundation president Jim DeMint told a cheering crowd a day ahead of a keynote address by Trump at the first major conservati­ve get-together since his election.

The movement, which champi-

ons so-called “family values” and free market liberalism, has had some trouble coming to terms with Trump, who last year was criticised by attendees for not being conservati­ve enough.

Once close to Democrats, the real estate tycoon has shifted rightward but continues to call for massive infrastruc­ture investment, and his isolationi­st and protection­ist talk has made many within the party bristle.

But his campaign director turned senior White House advisor Kellyanne Conway declared CPAC has already warmed to the Trump era.

“By tomorrow it’s going to be TPAC,” she quipped, arguing that Trump had “replaced this fiction of electabili­ty with this revelation of electricit­y and brought people in.”

Many in the crowd echoed the victory cry, with young attendees seen wearing “Socialism sucks” T-shirts and “Repeal Obamacare” buttons.

“We’re pleasantly surprised by what Trump has been doing,” Steve Hanly, a 61-year-old pilot from Dallas, Texas, said.

The billionair­e president’s opening moves, including curbs on funding for aid groups that support abortion and the nomination of a conservati­ve Supreme Court justice, convinced Hanly to trust Trump even though he is not “a true conservati­ve”.

Six years ago, Trump spoke for the first time at CPAC and was booed at times, although his words denouncing the political class and railing against economic rivals China and Mexico went down well.

When the president addresses the thousands of grassroots activists, he will likely be welcomed as the saviour of the Republican Party, which now controls the White House and both chambers of Congress for the first time in a decade.

“I’m old enough to remember when Republican­s were hopelessly lost and in the minority,” said Charles Quilhot, an insurance broker living in Newport News, Virginia.

Trump’s first month in office has been hectic, Quilhot acknowledg­ed, “But it’s a lot better than the alternativ­e,” the establishm­ent Democrat Clinton.

Not long ago the populist, nationalis­t right wing, first embodied by rebellious Tea Party activists but embraced more recently by Trump supporters, rose to the fore in a movement once dominated by Christian conservati­ves. — AFP

 ??  ?? Coming to a head: A man wearing a yarmulke supporting Trump at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Maryland. — Reuters
Coming to a head: A man wearing a yarmulke supporting Trump at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Maryland. — Reuters

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