Daily Southtown

CPAC shows rumors of GOP civil war are exaggerate­d

- Jonah Goldberg Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Greater Orlando, Florida, hosts several of the most visited theme parks in the world. At the Magic Kingdom you can dress up like a princess, pretend you’re a pirate or just act like you’re a kid again. Universal’s Islands of Adventure lets diehard Harry Potter fans pretend they’re students at Hogwarts. At Epcot you can visit Future World or the make-believe recreation­s of other countries. At the Canada Pavilion, for example, you can let your imaginatio­n whisk you away to that fantastica­l land of romance and adventure to the north.

So, it’s somewhat fitting that the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference decamped down to Orlando this past weekend.

The official motto of the confab was “America Uncanceled.” But if you actually followed the conversati­ons, the real theme was the stuff of make-believe: imagining a world where Donald Trump really had won the 2020 election.

On the official agenda there were seven separate “Protecting Elections” panels and two “Save Our Elections Call Center” sessions. Other panels included: “Shining a Light on the Left’s 2020 Shadow Campaign,” “Fraudulent Elections in South Korea and the United States — Lessons Learned and Warnings for the Future,” and “The Voter Files: The Truth Is Out There: Ask Your Questions to the Election Lawyers.” Needless to say, the question for this audience wasn’t whether the election was stolen, but what to do about the fact that it was — and where to place the blame for the cover-up.

All this make-believe was necessary because, as former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway said prophetica­lly in 2017, CPAC would become TPAC, or “Trump PAC,” and it has.

The one thing Trump and his biggest fans will not stomach is the suggestion that he’s a loser. Moreover, as Andrew Egger notes at The Dispatch, “there’s ostensibly nothing modern conservati­ves hate more than a loser — Sen. Mitt Romney, after all, was once a CPAC darling too.”

The combined need to salve egos — on the stage and in the audience — and protect the new TPAC business model made questionin­g Trump’s “victory” as productive as telling the Harry Potter fans down the road that their $55 magic wands aren’t really magic.

To this crowd, Trump won and anyone who says otherwise is peddling fake news. The real fake news, however, is the idea that the CPAC crowd is actually opposed to cancel culture. They oppose — often with good reason — left-wing cancel culture. But Trump himself is among America’s foremost would-be cancelers. And pro-Trump cancel culture is alive and well, as countless efforts to censure Trump critics attest.

Matt Schlapp, the leader of CPAC, often says things like, “Open discussion of legitimate points of view is what separates conservati­ves from the left in America.” But he saw no reason to acknowledg­e Trump’s defeat, never mind that Trump shouldn’t define conservati­sm or the Republican Party. And conservati­ves who might speak up on the alternativ­e facts — the truth in this case — weren’t technicall­y “canceled,” they simply were not invited. (One invitee, Young Pharaoh, was actually booted because of anti-Semitic tweets.)

In his closing peroration before the faithful, Trump ran through many of his greatest hits and recycled the usual fake evidence that he won, except for claims about Dominion voting machines being rigged. Apparently losing an election isn’t nearly so reality-affirming as a potential billion-dollar lawsuit.

He also took time to call for the cancellati­on of every Republican who voted for impeachmen­t or conviction, including “the warmonger” Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming. “Get rid of them all,” he demanded. The clear message: Unity in the GOP is defined by blind loyalty to him and his lies.

CPAC has never been the political bellwether its promoters claim, but at this stage in the 2024 presidenti­al cycle it’s the best we’ve got.

It doesn’t tell us what will really matter in the years of jockeying ahead, but it does tell us what very ambitious politician­s think is important. And, going by the speeches, it seems that rumors of a GOP civil war are greatly exaggerate­d. In a civil war, at least two sides need to show up. This looked more like the victorious Bolsheviks trying to round up the last of the Mensheviks.

Speaking for many, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas declared, “Donald Trump isn’t going anywhere.” He’s right, of course. As always, Cruz would rather bend the knee to the man who attacked his wife and accused his father of being involved in President Kennedy’s assassinat­ion than stand and fight.

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