The new right celebrates Trump at a conservative conference and 
		sidesteps inconsistencies
		
		 
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		 [December 23, 2024]  
		By BILL BARROW 
		
		PHOENIX (AP) — As Washington heaved over the possibility of a partial 
		government shutdown, leading far-right figures gathered with thousands 
		of Donald Trump’s most ardent supporters and, for the most part, gloried 
		in splintering the president-elect’s party. 
		 
		Speakers and attendees at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest 2024 hailed 
		Trump and billionaire Elon Musk for initially scuttling a bipartisan 
		agreement to keep government open. They jeered House Speaker Mike 
		Johnson and his willingness to engage with Democrats, disregarding 
		Johnson's close alliance with Trump and frequent appearances at his 
		side. 
		 
		“The political class is infected with a malignant cancer. The cancer is 
		bipartisanship,” boomed Steve Bannon, the Trump adviser who perhaps more 
		than any other reflects and stokes the president-elect’s pugilistic 
		populism. 
		 
		“We don’t need partisanship,” Bannon continued, as he called for 
		Johnson’s ouster. “We need hyper-partisanship.” 
		 
		The president-elect has wide latitude with his core supporters and is in 
		turn responsive to their demands. That dynamic fuels the 
		unpredictability put on display in last week’s budget fight and sets up 
		inevitable future conflicts within Trump’s broadened Republican 
		coalition. 
		 
		That Trump failed to achieve his central goals — with 38 Republicans 
		voting against a plan backed by Trump and Musk — seemed unimportant to 
		Bannon and others who welcomed Trump to the conference's Sunday finale. 
		The fight itself, and the incoming president being at the center of it, 
		was the point. 
		 
		“Thank you, God, for sending us Donald Trump,” said Turning Point 
		founder Charlie Kirk as Trump took the stage. Thousands roared and held 
		their cell phones aloft to capture the moment. 
		
		
		  
		
		Trump's supporters differ on what they want 
		 
		Interviews with people at AmericaFest and arguments from speakers 
		illustrated that, beyond fealty to Trump, the new right in America is 
		defined philosophically by anti-establishment sentiment, staunchly 
		conservative social mores and vocal declarations of patriotism — not a 
		uniform policy consensus. 
		 
		“I just want everything Trump said he was going to do,” said Andrew 
		Graves, a 39-year-old former Disney employee who now works as an Arizona 
		organizer for Turning Point. “It doesn’t matter how as long as we get it 
		done.” 
		 
		Pressed on what “it” is, Graves mentioned “what’s going on in education” 
		and “keeping women out of men’s sports.” He talked about Trump’s 
		signature promises – tariffs on foreign imports, a hardline immigration 
		crackdown – only when prompted. 
		 
		Jennifer Pacheco, a 20-year-old student from Southern California, said 
		she embraced Turning Point because she likes Kirk’s unapologetic 
		Christianity and believes “we need to have God be more present in this 
		country.” 
		 
		In Trump, Pacheco sees a transformative figure. “It’s just everything 
		that’s off track, and I think we will see things get fixed,” she said, 
		talking about the economy and cultural values. 
		 
		When asked, Pacheco said she does sometimes worry about national debt 
		levels. But she said she did not closely follow the week’s maneuvers in 
		Washington and was unfamiliar with Trump’s call to essentially eliminate 
		the nation’s debt ceiling through the entirety of his upcoming term. 
		 
		Alexander Sjorgen, a 26-year-old from Berks County, Pennsylvania, 
		volunteered a more detailed list of policy priorities: addressing 
		structural deficits, goosing domestic energy production, launching a 
		mass deportation program, curtailing “the transgender rights” agenda, 
		rethinking how involved the U.S. is in international affairs. 
		 
		“For the most part, we all just want to see the country strong again and 
		feel like its ours again,” he said. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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            President-elect Donald Trump speaks at AmericaFest, Sunday, Dec. 22, 
			2024, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) 
            
			
			  
            One speaker calls for a ‘revolutionary moment’ 
			 
			That ethos permeated convention halls and meeting rooms awash in 
			Trump paraphernalia – the “Make America Great Again” hats, T-shirts 
			emblazoned with the bloodied candidate after Trump survived an 
			assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania. Among the throngs, 
			there was the occasional fully costumed “Uncle Sam” or Revolutionary 
			War figure. 
			 
			Top speakers seized on the atmosphere, being greeted as celebrities 
			and drawing roars of approval on everything from demanding 
			confirmation of Trump’s Cabinet picks to imprisoning members of 
			Congress who investigated the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. 
			 
			“It feels good to win back our country,” Kirk told the opening 
			assembly. But, he added, “the transformation of the Republican Party 
			is not yet complete.” He threatened primaries against any GOP 
			senator who votes against a Trump nominee, warnings that have 
			already affected Capitol Hill. 
			 
			Bannon praised the assembled activists as “the vanguard of a 
			revolutionary movement” and compared Trump’s election to Franklin 
			Roosevelt’s 1932 realignment of working-class Americans behind 
			Democrats. Bannon skewered Johnson and other establishment 
			Republicans in “the imperial capital,” his derisive quip for 
			Washington. 
			 
			“President Trump came back from the political dead,” Bannon said, 
			framing Trump’s sweep of seven battleground states as a landslide. 
			“We have nothing else to discuss. It’s only about the execution of 
			President Trump’s agenda.” 
			 
			During 75 minutes at the podium on Sunday, Trump ticked through many 
			of his usual pledges and policy ideas. But he did not acknowledge 
			his unsuccessful venture on Capitol Hill last week or continued 
			questions about whether he will try to unseat Johnson. Summing up 
			his intentions, Trump opted for politically fuzzy rhetoric. 
			 
			“Last month, the American people voted for change,” he said, touting 
			a ”common-sense” agenda and promising a “golden age” for the 
			country. 
			 
			Kirk, Bannon and other influencers discussed the Trump agenda in 
			more detail than most attendees, sometimes even acknowledging 
			discrepancies and complexity. 
			 
			Bannon conceded Trump did not get his way on the debt ceiling vote 
			but said he eventually would. But he also insisted that doesn’t mean 
			Trump won’t cut spending. “He’s got a plan. … But you’ve got to line 
			everything up,” he said, spotlighting billionaires Musk and Vivek 
			Ramaswamy and their “government efficiency” commission. 
			 
			Ben Shapiro, another commentator, offered assurances that Trump 
			would rethink tariffs if they “are in fact inflationary.” Further, 
			Shapiro tried to reconcile Trump’s staunch support for U.S. aid to 
			Israel and conservatives’ disdain for foreign aid, including for 
			Ukraine in its war against its invading Russian neighbors. Israel’s 
			fight against Hamas, Shapiro argued, is “existential,” suggesting 
			that Ukraine’s defensive posture is not. 
            
			  
			Retired Gen. Michael Flynn, a firebrand forced out of Trump's first 
			White House who Trump has suggested he would bring back once in 
			office, insisted conservatives are not isolationist even as he 
			assailed the Pentagon footprint around the world. 
			 
			“I’m not anti-war,” Flynn said from the main podium. “I’m 
			anti-stupid war.” 
			 
			Kirk, meanwhile, tried to frame any differences across Trump’s 
			coalition as reconcilable. 
			 
			“Maybe you are a parents-rights advocate. Maybe you are here as a 
			Second Amendment enthusiast. … Maybe you are a pastor. Maybe you are 
			a ‘Make America Healthy Again’ advocate,” Kirk said. “Whatever focus 
			group you have, as long we can agree on the big stuff … we need to 
			combine forces and defeat the incumbent regime. Welcome aboard. We 
			are going to make America great again.” 
			
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