

I returned to the Potomac ballroom just as Glenn Beck was about to speak. I'm old enough to remember when Glenn Beck employed Tomi Lahren. Glenn has one of those amazing speaking voices that booms across the stage and it was booming about the unofficial theme of CPAC 2019: the dangers and evils of socialism since the āevils of socialismā is the unofficial theme of CPAC 2019. You may recall that this lineāAmerica First versus socialismāhas already been established as President Trumpās main theme for the 2020 election. So I canāt really fault the conservatives here. Theyāre just staying on-brand.
After Beck it went to the (other) future of the Republican party, Candace Owens. Say what you want about her grasp of history, but Owens is actually a really compelling speaker. And because sheās from Trumpworld she also sells merch with the āBlexitā logo on it.
The idea of Blexit is that African-American voters are about to leave the Democratic party in droves because, Trump. This seems . . . unlikely? If you take Trumpās net approval ratingāwhich is right now only -9 (thatās very, very good for him) and slice and dice it across a whole bunch of cohorts, you see that among African-Americans he is a staggering -64.7.
I want to take a minute and put that into some perspective for you. Pick a group of people that you think are really, super-duper anti-Trump. Maybe people who live in cities? Theyāre a net -29. Okay, maybe people with post-graduate degrees? Theyāre -30. There is literally no other measurable demographic group that thinks as negatively about Trump as African-Americans.
But waitāthereās more! The best part is that Trumpās approval rating among African-Americans is actually dropping. In January of 2017 he was āonlyā -47. Since then heās dropped by another third. Which means that since Candace Owens started selling Blexit gear, African-American voters actually became even more anti-Trump than they already were.
I mean, if you believe the polls. Candace Owens has another theory about whatās going on, as Caleb Ecarma explained in Mediaite: āOwens also gave a historically-questionable account of how Democrats have won over black voters āĆ la, Dinesh DāSouzaāand it all has to do with the entertainment industry.ā And the entertainment industry is no match for the powers of Trump. Obviously.
In the programming break after a Devin Nunes cameoāheās got to be worried about Matt Gaetz taking his place in TrumpWorld, right?āweāve got some commercials. There were ads for the Heritage Foundation, which were strangely hypnotic commercials and made Heritage sound like a mobile carrier, or a logistics company. And Judicial Watch played promos featuring Hillary Clintonās emails. I was . . . surprised? . . . that the CPAC crowd still cared about Clintonās emails. But maybe I shouldnāt have been. When Judicial Watchās Tom Fittonāwho has the most enormous biceps Iāve ever seen in my lifeācame on stage to talk, he promised that there was going to be āmore accountability for Hillary Clinton.ā
It made me wonder how long conservatives will take comfort in dreams of locking her up. Iāll set the over-under at November 2028.
The crowd got a Very Special Appearance by Vice President Mike Pence who stayed on message: "It was a freedom, not socialism, that ended slavery, won two world wars and stands today as the beacon of hope for all the world.ā
In truth, there wasnāt a ton of excitement on Friday, unless you count Senator Josh Hawley getting served with a subpoena as he left the stage or Laura Loomer.
Youāve probably heard of Laura Loomer. She likes to confront people on video and occasionally handcuff herself to the front doors of tech company offices. Sheās a perfectly normal, rational person. At CPAC she was wearing a T-shirt with a picture of herself on it while she confronted other credentialed media members. (Loomer also had CPAC press creds.) When asked what she was up to by Washingtonian, she explained, āI was āLoomeringā Oliver Darcy.ā
Part of what makes Loomer so animated is that she claims that she has been ādeplatformedā because of her beliefs not only by Twitter, but by Uber and Lyft. As I said: Perfectly normal and well-adjusted and exactly the sort of spokeswoman conservatism should want.