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		Trump likely to dangle possibility of a 2024 run in first post-White 
		House speech, activist says
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		 [February 23, 2021] 
		By Steve Holland 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former President 
		Donald Trump is likely to dangle the possibility of running again for 
		president in 2024 in his first major post-White House speech this 
		weekend, the organizer of the conservative conference where Trump will 
		speak said on Monday.
 
 Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union, which hosts 
		the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) where Trump will 
		speak on Sunday, said he expected Trump to outline an active role in 
		Republican Party politics at the four-day event in Orlando, Florida.
 
 "I'm not sure what he's going to say about 2024 but I'm pretty confident 
		he's going to make it clear that it's a very viable possibility," 
		Schlapp told Reuters.
 
 A representative for Trump declined to comment on what he might say at 
		the event. Trump has previously said he would consider running again for 
		the presidency.
 
 
		
		 
		Trump has signaled that he intends to play a role in the 2022 midterm 
		elections, which will determine if Democrats keep control of Congress, 
		by supporting primary challengers to congressional Republicans who voted 
		to impeach or convict him on a charge of inciting his supporters' deadly 
		Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol.
 
 But talk of another White House run could have the effect of freezing 
		the Republican field at a time when White House aspirants would be 
		quietly gathering supporters. Other potential 2024 Republican candidates 
		include Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and South Dakota Governor Kristi 
		Noem, both of whom will also be attending the CPAC conference.
 
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			President Donald Trump (L) shakes hands with Matt Schlapp, chairman 
			of the American Conservative Union, at the Conservative Political 
			Action Conference (CPAC) annual meeting at National Harbor in Oxon 
			Hill, Maryland, U.S., February 29, 2020. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/ 
            
			 
            A straw poll of CPAC attendees on their 2024 preferences will add 
			some buzz to the conversation at the end of the event on Sunday.
 Trump spent two months after losing the Nov. 3 election to 
			Democratic President Joe Biden falsely claiming that his defeat was 
			the result of widespread fraud, a campaign that ended in the Jan. 6 
			riot and turned some senior Republicans against him.
 
 Establishment party leaders including top Senate Republican Mitch 
			McConnell, would like to put Trump in the rear-view mirror while his 
			supporters believe the energy he generates in the conservative base 
			can help propel Republicans to victory in the 2022 midterm 
			elections.
 
 "Donald Trump is going to stay in the game and will be involved in 
			primaries and he’s going to opine and he’s going to give speeches, 
			and for establishment Republicans it puts shivers down their spine. 
			They're very concerned he's going to continue to have an impact. My 
			advice to them is to get used to it," Schlapp said.
 
 Schlapp said Trump's vice president, Mike Pence, declined an 
			invitation to speak at CPAC this year. Pence has harbored 
			presidential aspirations.
 
 "He's going to take a little bit of time before he starts making 
			public comments," Schlapp said of Pence.
 
 (Reporting By Steve Holland; Editing by Scott Malone and Howard 
			Goller)
 
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