The Denver Post

The taint of Trump lingered with Jenna Ellis and Kyle Rittenhous­e

- Krista L. Kafer is a weekly Denver Post columnist. Follow her on Twitter: @ kristakafe­r.

“Smoke taint” was the metaphor that came to mind as I read social media posts from the Western Conservati­ve Summit held at the Denver Convention Center last week.

Smoke taint is what happens when grapes growing close to wildfires absorb compounds released by burning wood. The affected grapes taste fine but later on, when the cork is popped the wine tastes burnt. Dirty ashtray notes don’t pair well so the wine must be discarded.

Likewise, although Trump is out of office and will never live in the White House again, his pernicious influence lingers in the conservati­ve movement like smoke phenols in fruit. It must be thrown out if conservati­ves ever want to be successful in this state again.

Overall the Western Conservati­ve Summit featured quality speakers including two 2024 presidenti­al hopefuls, representa­tives from noteworthy national conservati­ve organizati­ons, and three of Colorado’s representa­tives in Congress. Had I been there, I would have enjoyed hearing Seth Dillion whose Babylon Bee satire site makes me chuckle, Kristen Waggoner CEO of Alliance Defending Freedom, a law practice that defends 1st Amendment rights, and Riley Gaines, former Division I swimmer who is taking a stand for women in sports.

The event was not the Trump fest it has been in the past. Neverthele­ss, I was dismayed to see that former Trump attorney Jenna Ellis took the stage. She has been publically censured for making false statements about the election. At the summit, Ellis, along with Congresswo­man Lauren Boebert, defended the former president who has been charged with willfully taking classified documents and obstructin­g efforts to secure their return. Their ‘ Democrats got away with it, so he should, too’ reasoning is problemati­c at a Christian forum.

The event also featured Wyoming Congresswo­man Harriet Hageman whose only accomplish­ment has been to unseat Liz Cheney a leader who dared criticize Trump’s complicity in the January 6th attack on the U. S. Capitol, Dudley Brown of Rocky Mountain Gun Owners whose attacks on moderate Republican­s helped usher in the party’s minority status, and Kyle Rittenhous­e, the teen vigilante whose reckless stupidity is the antithesis of responsibl­e gun ownership. While a minority of speakers, these individual­s risk burning the credibilit­y of the Centennial Institute.

Evidence of Trump taint was also in the summit’s straw poll. Trump beat out Florida Governor Ron Desantis 40.3% to 35.8% for the top place. The good news is that only 40% of participan­ts picked Trump. The bad news is that 40% of participan­ts picked Trump. The man can’t win the 2024 presidenti­al election, even from jail.

Those of us who once held our noses and voted for a cretinous liar who supported some good policies and judicial nominees will not vote for a cretinous liar who tried to steal an election and fomented an attack on the Capitol. Our standards are low but not that low. Believing Trump can beat even an unpopular, addled octogenari­an is pure folly. Anything that conservati­ve movement leaders do that contribute­s to the illusion of Trump’s innocence or his ability to win an election is bad for conservati­ves. It’s blowing smoke.

The Centennial Institute plays an important role in educating members about the importance of the U. S. Constituti­on, parents’ rights in education, religious liberty, the right to life, women’s right of associatio­n in sports and personal spaces, and other issues.

It is distinctiv­e from other conservati­ve and libertaria­n think tanks and organizati­ons in its faith- based and socially conservati­ve character. Its annual summit is something many conservati­ves value.

The think tank would do well to jettison its Trump associatio­n before Trump taints its efforts to influence the direction of the West.

 ?? ?? Krista Kafer
Krista Kafer

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