Chattanooga Times Free Press

CPAC A CIRCUS WITH TRUMP AS RINGMASTER

- Jim Geraghty is National Review’s senior political correspond­ent.

The Conservati­ve Political Action Conference once was a don’t-miss annual gathering of Republican leadership and anyone who aspired to it. That doesn’t describe the Trumpified, four-day CPAC that started Wednesday at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Md.

Absent will be such GOP stars as former Vice President Mike Pence, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin. All three say they’re busy or otherwise booked; DeSantis is attending the Club for Growth’s annual conference in Palm Beach, Fla.

A bunch of other high-profile Republican­s also won’t be attending CPAC this year: Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy of California, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.

For what it’s worth, these GOP leaders have not publicly said they’re no-shows because of sexual misconduct allegation­s against Matt Schlapp, who runs CPAC. But the allegation­s — denied by Schlapp, that last fall he groped a male campaign aide for Herschel Walker, the GOP Senate candidate in Georgia — certainly don’t make appearing at CPAC look more appealing.

However, CPAC will feature former President Donald Trump, former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, and My Pillow king and conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell. There is no more vivid indicator of CPAC’s trajectory across the years than the fact that the conference’s annual Ronald Reagan Dinner address will be delivered by Arizona gubernator­ial sore loser Kari Lake.

At a time when many Republican­s are ready to move on from lunatic arguments about 2020 presidenti­al election theft, CPAC organizers are doubling down, shining an even brighter spotlight on conspiracy-minded election losers and their acolytes.

Year by year, CPAC has become less and less of a wonky conservati­ve movement networking event and more and more of a circus. The guest list features fewer and fewer policy experts debating the correct path for conservati­ves, and more and more telegenic faces who usually populate the Fox News green room — one after another, at CPAC, serving up red meat. The tone is now indistingu­ishable from one of Trump’s campaign rallies.

And no one should be all that surprised; Matt Schlapp’s wife, Mercedes, served as White House strategic communicat­ions director under Trump, and both Schlapps are widely perceived as Trump loyalists. The image of CPAC is now indistingu­ishable from Trump’s.

To quote economist Milton Friedman — praised by Reagan at CPAC in 1981, probably unknown to most attendees today — the conference is “free to choose.”

If CPAC’s main goal is to fill seats, it appears to be working well enough. Like all conference­s, CPAC runs on paid attendance and sponsorshi­ps, and you can’t begrudge organizers for wanting a lineup of speakers who will draw a crowd and fire ‘em up.

But there’s an inevitable trade-off when the conference chooses Trumpifica­tion, prominentl­y featuring figures such as Lindell and Lake. They become the face of the event.

The cost-benefit analysis for an aspiring president such as Pence or DeSantis changes when the Venn diagram of CPAC’s brand and Trump’s brand becomes almost a perfect circle. If you’re trying to beat Trump, does it make sense to go to a de facto four-day Trump rally on the Potomac?

Granted, CPAC attracts a big crowd of the most die-hard conservati­ve grassroots activists, but a Republican presidenti­al candidate can reach that demographi­c in plenty of other ways — interviews on Fox News, talk radio, podcasts or other conservati­ve outlets.

CPAC chose the path of being identified as a Trumpy affair. Organizers shouldn’t be surprised when candidates not named Trump aren’t so enthusiast­ic about showing up. Much like the fictional “Spinal Tap,” CPAC would likely insist it isn’t losing popularity, it’s just that the gathering’s “appeal is becoming more selective.”

 ?? ?? Jim Geraghty
Jim Geraghty

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