Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Trump slates CPAC talk

- By Maggie Haberman ,

Former President Donald Trump will speak at the conservati­ve event known as CPAC on Feb.

28, his first public appearance and lengthy address since he left the White House for a final time last month.

A senior aide to Trump confirmed that he would attend the Conservati­ve Public Action Conference, which is being held in Orlando, Florida, this year, and that he planned to talk about the future of the Republican Party as well as President Joe Biden’s immigratio­n policies, which have been aimed at undoing Trump’s.

What Trump plans to talk about and what he ultimately says once he is onstage often diverge, as he discards scripts that aides prepare for him.

But it will be the first time that he has spoken in a public setting since the deadly Jan. 6 riot by his supporters at the Capitol building.

The former president, who was permanentl­y banned from Twitter and who is facing investigat­ions into his businesses as well as whether he has culpabilit­y for the assault on the Capitol, has generally kept a low profile, except for giving a small round of interviews to sympatheti­c news outlets about the death of radio host Rush Limbaugh last week. Even though the interviews were supposed to be about Limbaugh, Trump still strayed into repeating his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him.

But CPAC is traditiona­lly a cattle call for Republican candidates for office as well as aspiring figures in the party. And Trump has signaled to several allies and advisers in recent days that he is focused on running for president again in 2024.

Whether he actually does is an open question. But his presence could freeze the field for the next two years, preventing other candidates from developing operations and, more important, networks of donors to sustain their candidacie­s.

Trump is currently locked in a battle with Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., over the party’s future and what kind of candidates it attracts. Mcconnell has made it clear that he wants to try to minimize Trump’s influence after the deadly riot.

But Trump has said he will try to encourage candidates who will carry his brand of politics forward.

Last year, Trump gave a speech downplayin­g the threat of the novel coronaviru­s and insisting that his administra­tion had the situation in hand.

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