San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Trump trying to cement his hold on GOP

- By Josh Dawsey and Michael Scherer

Any lingering doubts about Donald Trump’s primacy in the Republican Party have been settled in recent weeks by the parade of petitioner­s he has welcomed to his Florida social club.

The party chairwoman, the top two House Republican­s, the senior senator from South Carolina and a coterie of other former aides and advisers have all made appearance­s at Mar-a-Lago, offering their counsel and seeking the favor of a former president who many believe controls the shortterm fortunes of GOP candidates up and down the ballot — and has made it clear he plans to use that power.

Trump has already started building his post-White House political operation and cementing his role as the party’s de facto leader. He has begun to formalize a structure of political advisers around him and made plans to start a new super PAC — capable of raising donations of any size — to support candidates he favors. His team is looking to formalize a process for vetting endorsemen­t prospects, assessing what candidates have said and done for Trump in the past.

He has also discussed drafting a new “America First” agenda — like the 1994 “Contract with America,” but focused on issues such as border security and trade — to steer the party’s direction, according to Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

“He is going to be very involved,” Graham said.

It’s not just about shaping the GOP from the sidelines. Trump is keenly focused on his long-term political comeback, quizzing allies about how to launch a 2024 bid and who his most formidable challenger­s would be, advisers said.

To the relief of party strategist­s, the former president has abandoned for now talk of starting a third party, according to several people, who, like others interviewe­d for this story, spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversati­ons.

He has begun intervenin­g to pick favorites in GOP primaries, endorsing on Friday a former aide challengin­g a House member who voted for his impeachmen­t. But he is not planning to go up against every Republican who defied him, they said. “What’s the point of a civil war in a party you basically control?” joked one Republican operative close to Trump.

A Trump spokesman did not respond to requests for comment.

Trump’s dominance of the GOP will be reinforced Sunday, when he addresses the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Orlando, his first major political speech since leaving the White House. In a pageant scripted to emphasize his importance, he will be one of the last to speak in the three-day gathering, taking the stage right after the announceme­nt of a presidenti­al straw poll that he is widely expected to win.

Even after the GOP lost the House, Senate and White House under his watch — and Trump was impeached twice, most recently for his role in inciting a violent insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol — his sharpest critics concede that he remains in control of the party and his allies are ascendant.

“It’s Donald Trump’s party. It’s the party of (Rep.) Marjorie Taylor Greene,” said Sarah Longwell, a GOP strategist who founded Republican Voters Against Trump. “We are maybe 10 percent. Trump needed to be thoroughly repudiated. Only then could you have a fight for the soul of the Republican Party. That didn’t happen.”

Republican­s have told Trump that it is in his own self-interest to use his influence to help the party in the 2022 midterms, a message they said appears to resonate with him.

“If we do well in 2022, that’s good for his brand. That’s going to help the Trump brand,” Graham said of the message he and other Republican­s have been bringing to Florida. “I told him that several times.”

Intraparty attacks

Still, by all accounts, Trump remains furious at a few he believes betrayed him from within during his attempt to overturn the election results — Rep. Liz Cheney, RWyo., Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., all come up frequently, sometimes multiple times a day, according to people who speak to him.

That desire for revenge worries GOP officials. On Friday, the former president made his first endorsemen­t against an incumbent House Republican, backing a former White House aide, Max Miller, against Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, R-Ohio, a former NFL wide receiver who voted for impeachmen­t. Gonzalez’s district, where Trump won nearly 57 percent of the vote, is considered relatively safe for Republican­s in 2022.

“Current Rep. Anthony Gonzalez should not be representi­ng the people of the 16th district because he does not represent their interest or their heart,” Trump said in a statement.

Gonzalez declined to comment.

Trump still tells visitors that the election was “stolen” from him but now claims it is because Democrats changed the rules around absentee and vote by mail — and talks less about false allegation­s involving voting machines made by Dominion, which has been suing his allies. In recent weeks, he has polled advisers on whether he should continue to speak publicly about the last election. Most are urging him to move on.

His shift away from some of the fantastica­l conspiracy theories he once encouraged has been a comfort to party strategist­s in recent weeks as Republican­s in Washington try to plan a takeover of the House and Senate and win back some of the voters Trump repulsed in 2020. Few are willing to guess whether he will stick by it in the months ahead.

“Generating Republican majorities in the House and Senate is a much better look and feel for a former president than revenge and retributio­n,” said Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s former campaign manager and senior White House adviser, who has remained in touch with him. “President Trump knows that his impact can be broader and deeper than a myopic focus on the handful of members who voted to impeach him.”

Graham said he told the former president that his personal behavior and his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic had damaged him, but that he could repair his standing with policy fights on topics such as immigratio­n.

Trump’s CPAC speech is expected to take on Biden and tout his own immigratio­n policies, while also serving to broadly stake out his leadership of the Republican Party. The text was written by former White House speechwrit­er Stephen Miller, his communicat­ions adviser Jason Miller and others, according to Trump advisers.

He is expected to draw a rapturous reception from the crowd. As they await his arrival, attendees have been posing with a golden Trump statue. Some are carting his now-deleted tweets, bound into books.

“You are going to see a speech on Sunday that talks not only about the beginning but what the future may look like,” Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows said in a recent appearance on Fox News. “What we will see on Sunday is we will see the start of planning for the next administra­tion, and I can tell you the people that are on the top of that list (to win in 2024), all of them have Trump as their last name.”

Remaining active

Beyond Sunday’s speech and a planned appearance at a Republican National Committee donor retreat in Palm Beach in April, Trump has not yet filled a public schedule. But advisers say they expect him to remain active and appear far more often on television.

The planning is being handled by a familiar network of advisers, who have decided for the moment to leave past feuds and bad blood from the last campaign behind to support the former president. On Thursday, he met with his first 2020 campaign manager, Brad Parscale, and the man who replaced him, Bill Stepien, along with Justin Clark, a deputy campaign manager for Trump’s 2020 effort.

Parscale is taking the lead on data and digital efforts, Stepien is advising on endorsemen­ts and Clark is working on political and legal issues.

Corey Lewandowsk­i, his 2016 campaign manager, is set to be involved in a new super PAC Trump is expecting to launch as a companion to his Save America leadership PAC. While the latter still has a war chest of millions of dollars given by donors to fight alleged election fraud, Trump has been dissatisfi­ed that the PAC’s legal structure allows backers to give up to only $5,000.

“He’s not really into the first PAC,” a person close to him said. “It has a limit on how much money you can get.”

His son Donald Trump Jr. has taken a larger role in the political operation, with son-in-law Jared Kushner receding as an informal chief of staff. Trump has remarked to others that Kushner is a “smart kid” but said he doesn’t know as much about politics as he believed he did, a person who spoke to Trump recently said.

The question of whether he launches a campaign in 2024 remains open among those close to him, even as Trump is clearly maneuverin­g to give himself an option. One longtime adviser noted that the ultimate decision was likely to be shaped by external factors.

Trump’s decision to jump into politics was spurred in part by the mocking he endured from President Barack Obama before a crowd at the 2011 White House correspond­ents’ dinner, this person said.

“If he is left alone, he may or may not run again. If they keep on attacking him, he will get more involved,” the adviser said. “If he is getting attacked, he is going to attack back.”

 ?? Jabin Botsford / Washington Post ?? Artist Tommy Zegan cleans his statue of former President Donald Trump during the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Orlando on Friday. Trump will address the conference today in his first major political speech since leaving the White House.
Jabin Botsford / Washington Post Artist Tommy Zegan cleans his statue of former President Donald Trump during the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Orlando on Friday. Trump will address the conference today in his first major political speech since leaving the White House.

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