PBS NewsHour anchor Amna Nawaz introduced an unfriendly segment on the Conservative Political Action Conference's (CPAC) annual gathering in the Maryland suburbs of DC. Laura Barron-Lopez’s solemnly intoned field report on Friday evening was interspersed with her own opinions about the “white grievance politics” and the so-called “false belief” about teaching Critical Race Theory.
Barron-Lopez: Once, a Republican primary season tradition -- speeches to the party faithful at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, better known as CPAC--
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL): Vote for Donald J. Trump!
Barrón-López: --is now a platform for white grievance politics, loyal acolytes of former President Donald Trump--
Gaetz: We either get this government back on our side or we defund and get rid of, abolish the FBI, CDC, ATF, DOJ, every last one of them!
Barrón-López: --and election deniers.
Donald Trump Jr.: I'm the one that's willing to say this stuff because someone has to.
She noted many potential candidates were sitting out CPAC, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and interviewed Al Cardenas, the former chairman of the American Conservative Union, which organizes the annual conference. Cardenas now has the same liberal politics as his wife, Ana Navarro.
Cardenas: I don't think that most of the folks coming are conservative. I think they're populists. I think they're part of this cancel culture. I think they're deniers, election deniers.
She interviewed a medley of conference goers, broadly supportive of Trump, before setting up controversial Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Laura Barrón-López: Trump has won the CPAC straw poll the last two years, and his influence was present again this year. Some of his biggest allies, like Marjorie Taylor Greene, had prime speaking slots to push a far-right agenda.
That led into a Greene soundbite which really wasn’t all that “far-right.”
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA): I'm going to be introducing my bill, the Protect Children's Innocence Act, that will make it a felony to perform anything to do with gender-affirming care on children.
But PBS’s reporter on the spot really got hot when things turned to “woke,” to the point of demanding conference-goers define “woke” for her.
Barrón-López: In recent weeks, some other would-be candidates like DeSantis have targeted suburban voters, who recently departed the GOP, with a tough-on-crime message. But for the audience at CPAC, the focus on anti-LGBTQ, anti-transgender, and a false belief that K-12 schools teach college-level race and ethnic studies, resonated the most.
As if PBS would have appreciated a “tough-on-crime” message any more than they like the anti-woke one.
Alex Walton, CPAC Attendee: There's been a lot of focus on the past couple of years on some really important issues, like Critical Race Theory and classrooms and the overall content that they're teaching in schools. That stuff's important.
Ann Katcef: Woke. Woke is divisive and…
Laura Barrón-López: What is woke?
Ann Katcef: Woke, that's where -- I have got the Critical Race Theory. You got all the -- woke is broad, I mean, it’s to me, it's the Critical Race Theory, the bathroom thing.
The segment segued into the usual Friday night political pundit pairing of the Washington Post’s associate editor Jonathan Capehart and New York Times columnist David Brooks, both of whom condemned the gathering, with Brooks accusing CPAC of having “gone from centrist populism, which was pretty right, to wacky populism.”
The liberal Capehart agreed with PBS’s supposedly objective reporter: “So I think, Laura pointed out perfectly, that conference is now just about white grievance and targeting trans kids and anyone who’s not like them.”
So much for a rollicking exchange of views!
A relevant transcript is below, click “Expand” to read:
PBS NewsHour
3/3/23
7:30 PM ET
Laura Barrón-López: Once a Republican primary season tradition…
Fmr. Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK): They're socialists.
Michael Lindell, CEO, MyPillow: Paper ballots hand-counted.
Laura Barrón-López: … speeches to the party faithful at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, better known as CPAC…
Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL): Vote for Donald J. Trump!
Laura Barrón-López:… is now a platform for white grievance politics, loyal acolytes of former President Donald Trump.
Rep. Matt Gaetz: We either get this government back on our side or we defund and get rid of, abolish the FBI, CDC, ATF, DOJ, every last one of them!
Laura Barrón-López: And election deniers.
Donald Trump Jr., Son of Donald Trump: I'm the one that's willing to say this stuff because someone has to.
Laura Barrón-López: Tomorrow, Trump delivers the keynote speech to close out the conference. But he's not alone. All of the GOP's declared presidential candidates are making their case, today, former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley.
Nikki Haley (R), Presidential Candidate: I'm running for president to renew an America that is strong and proud, not weak and woke.
Laura Barrón-López: And entrepreneur and activist Vivek Ramaswamy.
Vivek Ramaswamy (R), Presidential Candidate: I am all in on the America first agenda.
Laura Barrón-López: Still, this year, several of the party's leaders, like House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel, as well as many of the potential presidential candidates, are sitting out. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, former Vice President Mike Pence, and South Carolina Senator Tim Scott are among those who will not be speaking, opting instead to attend a donor retreat in Florida for the conservative anti-tax group Club for Growth. Haley is going to both events.
Al Cardenas, Former Chair, American Conservative Union: Well, CPAC and the American Conservative Union specifically were the geese that laid the golden eggs for the Republican conservative movement.
Laura Barrón-López: Al Cardenas is a Republican strategist and the former chairman of the American Conservative Union, the organization responsible for organizing CPAC.
Al Cardenas: I don't think that most of the folks coming are conservative. I think they're populists. I think they're part of this cancel culture. I think they're deniers, election deniers.
Laura Barrón-López: CPAC and its current chairman, Matt Schlapp, are facing a new scandal. In January, Schlapp was accused of groping a GOP campaign aide during the midterm elections, allegations Schlapp denies. Cardenas says many 2020 hopefuls are skipping the conference for a different reason.
Al Cardenas: They're not coming either by design or by the fact that they don't want to be participants in a show that is basically laying a crown on Donald Trump's head.
Laura Barrón-López: A recent "PBS NewsHour"/NPR/Marist poll found that more than half of Republicans say the party would be better off with a 2024 nominee other than Donald Trump. But, here at CPAC, with this group of the Republican base, it's clear it's still Trump's party.
Ann Katcef, CPAC Attendee: I think that DeSantis is a possibility for the future, but not now. Trump deserves to finish what he started. And we need him.
Troella Tyznik, CPAC Attendee: President Trump is the best president that this nation can have. Right now, there is not anyone that can wear his moccasins.
Jaden Heard, CPAC Attendee: We know that Trump was a good president, but we think DeSantis will be a good president. Like, it's really, like, tough.
Laura Barrón-López: Trump has won the CPAC straw poll the last two years, and his influence was present again this year. Some of his biggest allies, like Marjorie Taylor Greene, had prime speaking slots to push a far right agenda.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA): I'm going to be introducing my bill, the Protect Children's Innocence Act, that will make it a felony to perform anything to do with gender-affirming care on children.
Laura Barrón-López: In recent weeks, some other would-be candidates like DeSantis have targeted suburban voters, who recently departed the GOP with a tough-on-crime message. But for the audience at CPAC, the focus on anti-LGBTQ, anti-transgender and a false belief that K-12 schools teach college-level race and ethnic studies resonated the most.
Alex Walton, CPAC Attendee: There's been a lot of focus on the past couple of years on some really important issues, like Critical Race Theory and classrooms and the overall content that they're teaching in schools. That stuff's important.
Ann Katcef: Woke. Woke is divisive and…
Laura Barrón-López: What is woke?
Ann Katcef: Woke, that's where -- I have got the Critical Race Theory. You got all the -- woke is broad. I mean, I -- it's -- to me, it's the Critical Race Theory, the bathroom thing.
Laura Barrón-López: With months before the primary debates begin, Cardenas says the GOP candidates are still honing their messages and finding their own path to the nomination.
Al Cardenas: You're either going to be a pure-blood, anti-woke, pro-culture wars candidate, or you're not. And the candidates who decide to jump into the fray, they have got to wait until either Donald Trump or Ron DeSantis fades away before they have a unique chance, I think
Laura Barrón-López: Though some have yet to officially join the race, most of the 2020 hopefuls will be traveling to the critical early state of Iowa in the coming weeks.