Party of
one: Donald Trump’s 75 minutes at CPAC talking about himself
Contemptuous
and sure of himself, the US president boasted of his victories and taunted his
enemies
David Smith
David Smith
in Oxon Hill, Maryland
Sun 23 Feb
2025 00.48 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/22/donald-trump-cpac-speech
God save the
king. Drunk on power, Donald Trump spent Saturday afternoon before adoring
fans, boasting of his victories, taunting his enemies and casting himself as
America’s absolute monarch, supreme leader and divine emperor rolled into one.
Trump’s
appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) at the
National Harbor in Maryland began with country singer Lee Greenwood’s “God
Bless the USA and raucous cheers in a crowded ballroom that included January 6
insurrectionists.
Seventy-five
minutes later, it concluded with the US president standing between two
stars-and-stripes flags, pumping his fists and swaying to the Village People’s
anthem YMCA.
What emerged
in between was a man who has never felt so sure of himself, so contemptuous of
his foes and so convinced of his righteous mission to make America great again,
even if it means breaking china, cracking skulls and leaving global destruction
in his wake.
As the title
of Michael Wolff’s new book puts it, last November’s election was All or
Nothing. Defeat meant ruin, disgrace and prison. Victory meant what Trump’s
cheerleaders like to call the greatest comeback in political history. It also
meant vengeance against his perceived tormentors in the justice department,
Democratic party and media. As the martyr of Mar-a-Lago put it at CPAC two
years ago: “I am your retribution.”
The message
he took from that win over Kamala Harris was that he had broken his opponents,
broken the checks and balances and broken reality itself. He was invincible.
“Why, man,
he doth bestride the narrow world/Like a Colossus,” Cassius tells Brutus in
William Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar, “and we petty men/Walk under his huge
legs and peep about/To find ourselves dishonorable graves.”
This was the
15th time Trump has addressed CPAC, the biggest annual gathering of
conservative activists. When he was out of power, his freewheeling speeches
could be dismissed as the ravings – or “weavings” – of a madman. Even during
his first term, his extremist rhetoric came with some expectation that the
democratic guardrails would hold.
But as
America and the world have discovered during his first month back in the White
House, Trump is unbound, unhinged and looking for blood. He took the stage at
CPAC brimming with confidence and basking in chants of: “USA! USA!”
The
78-year-old Florida resident describes his presidency as a game of golf in
which he can match Arnold Palmer all the way: “If you golf, when you sink that
first four-footer at the first hole, it gives you confidence, and then the next
hole you sink another and now you go on to that third hole and by the time you
get to the fifth hole you feel you can’t miss.”
To be here
was to live in a world turned upside down. Trump said: “For years, Washington
was controlled by a sinister group of radical-left Marxists, war-mongers and
corrupt special interests,” which would have been news to Karl Marx.
But then, on
5 November, “we stood up to all the corrupt forces that were destroying
America. We took away their power. We took away their confidence … and we took
back our country.”
Trump should
in fact have won by a bigger margin, he claimed without evidence, but Democrats
“cheated like hell” only to find his victory was “too big to rig”. Later, he
revisited his 2020 loss, too, assuring conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell that
“now it’s OK” to say the election was “rigged”.
The
president bragged about pardoning hundreds convicted of crimes in the January 6
attack on the US Capitol, describing them as “political prisoners” and “J6
hostages”. Some of them were in the room, chanting “J6! J6!” and shouting
“Thank you!”. They have gone from prison cells to being CPAC’s newest
celebrities.
Trump also
boasted about killing diversity, equity and inclusion programmes, denying the
identity of transgender people, yanking the US out of the Paris climate
agreement and sending undocumented immigrants (“monsters”) to Guantánamo Bay.
He hailed Elon Musk’s evisceration of the federal government, including the
international aid agency USAid.
Each time,
the crowd cheered.
Up until
then, CPAC had felt toned down this year, with few if any chants of “Lock her
up!” or T-shirts portraying Joe Biden as Satan. After all, Republicans won and
there is no obvious Democratic leader to target. Still, that did not prevent
Trump unleashing the usual insults and lies at his opponents.
“Kamala,” he
said, eliciting boos. “I haven’t heard that name in a while. Nobody ever knows
her last name ... But think of it, I was beating Joe badly and they changed
him. Think of it, I’m the only one who had to beat two people.”
The Biden
presidency already feels like a millennium ago but Trump did not want his
audience to forget, asking whether they preferred the nickname “Crooked Joe” or
“Sleepy Joe”. For the record, “Crooked Joe” won.
Trump mocked
Biden’s golf handicap and bathing suit and offered a baseless opinion: “He was
a sleepy, crooked guy. Terrible, terrible president. He was the worst president
in the history of our country ... Every single thing he touched turned to
shit.”
Such
magnanimity!
He took aim
at the Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren over her past claims of Native
American ancestry, recycling the “Pocahontas” nickname he once gave her and
jibing: “She does not like me. She’s a very angry person. You notice the way
she is? She’s always screaming. She’s crazy.”
And don’t
get Trump started on liberal TV host Rachel Maddow: “I watch this MSNBC – which
is a threat to democracy,actually – they’re stone-cold mean. But they’re
stuttering. They’re all screwed up. They’re all mentally screwed up. They don’t
know what – their ratings have gone down the tubes. I don’t even talk about
CNN, CNN’s sort of like, I don’t know, they’re pathetic, actually.
“This Rachel
Maddow, what does she have? She’s got nothing. Nothing. She took a sabbatical
where she worked one day a week. They paid her a lot of money. She gets no
ratings. I should go against her in the ratings because, I’ll tell you, she
gets no ratings. All she does is talk about Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. All
different subjects: Trump this, Trump, that. But these people are really, I
mean, they lie. They shouldn’t be allowed to lie every night. They are really a
vehicle of the Democrat party.”
Trump loves
the rightwing media that populates CPAC, however. He smugly quoted conservative
host Bill O’Reilly as saying that after four weeks Trump had become “the
greatest president ever in the history of our country”, beating George
Washington.
O’Reilly was
hardly alone this week in building an image of Trump as a superman who thinks
sleep is for wimps. How do they love him? Let us count the ways.
Dan Scavino,
a Trump golf caddie turned White House deputy chief of staff, described his
boss as “the greatest host in America”. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, a former White
House press secretary, said Trump is “maybe the most popular human on the face
of the planet right now”, adding: “He doesn’t sleep. He doesn’t expect anyone
to sleep either. He’s twice my age and has twice my energy.”
Mike Waltz,
the national security adviser, confirmed that Trump works 21 or 22 hours a day
and, along with the interior secretary, Doug Burgum, confidently forecast that
Trump would receive the Nobel peace prize for his capitulation to Vladimir
Putin masterful negotiations with Russia and Ukraine.
Border tsar
Tom Homan called Trump “the greatest president of my lifetime”. Elise Stefanik,
the US ambassador-designate to the United Nations, went one better by calling
him “the greatest president in the history of our country”.
And the
homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, whose home state of South Dakota
includes the ripe-for-addition Mount Rushmore, topped them all by just coming
out with it: “Our president wakes up every day knowing he’s the greatest
president of all time.”
When someone
wakes up knowing that, when their self-aggrandisement is so monumental, they
are like a golfer who believes they will never miss. But as Volodymyr Zelenskyy
of Ukraine put it, Trump is living inside a disinformation bubble. The iron law
of politics is that all bubbles burst.
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