Hello it’s the weekend. This is The Weekender â
Conspiracy theories and disgusting slurs were flying this week as the Conservative Political Action Conference took place at the Gaylord National Harbor Resort & Convention in Maryland.
As is his custom, far right anti-Semite Nicholas Fuentes attempted to make a spectacle at the confab in order to draw attention to himself and his âgroyperâ movement. Fuentes, who has hosted a rival âAmerica First Political Action Conferenceâ in recent years is persona non grata at CPAC, which has tried to distance itself from his open white nationalism. Nevertheless, he showed up at the event on Friday before being âremovedâ by security.
Fuentes narrated his ousting in real-time in a typo-filled set of messages on Telegram, a social media platform popular on the far right.
âI just got out of kicked out of CPAC. ⊠Iâm at the gaylord now theyre probably gonna kick me out the side entrance im not sure ⊠Wait by the elevators for me if ur here,â Fuentes wrote before dubbing himself âMost Cancelled Man in America.â
Despite his many cancellations, Fuentes is apparently unable to spell the word âcanceled.â However, he did manage to leave CPAC with a souvenir.
âI got a picture with Mike Lindell before I got kicked out,â Fuentes wrote alongside a photo he took with the pillow salesman and election denier extraordinaire.
Matt Schlapp, who is chairman of the group behind CPAC and who has plenty of his own problems, swiftly issued a statement.
âWe removed Nick Fuentes from his attempt to attend our conference. His hateful racist rhetoric and actions are not consistent with the mission of CPAC,â Schlapp said. âWe are pleased that our conference welcomes a wide array of conservative perspectives from people of different backgrounds, but we are concerned about the rise in antisemitic rhetoric (or Jew hatred) in our country and around the globe, whether it be in the corridors of power and academia or through the online ramblings of bigots like Fuentes.â
Before you give Schlapp too much credit, thereâs a lot to unpack here. First off, Schlapp is currently dealing with a âJohn Doeâ lawsuit from a Republican staffer. Doe accused Schlapp of âsexual batteryâ and âaggressively fondlingâ his genitals. Schlapp, who has denied the allegations, was rushing through the halls and literally dodging questions about them at the event.
And, despite efforts to distance themselves from Fuentes, CPAC has had a lot in common with his âAmerica First,â âgroyperâ movement. In past yearâs, CPAC and Fuentesâ AFPAC have had some of the same speakers including Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ), and Sheriff Joe Arpaio.
Even without Fuentes, there was also plenty of extremism at CPAC. The eventâs agenda included a panel headlined by a man convicted of breaching the Capitol on January 6 entitled âTrue Stories of January 6th: The Prosecuted Speak.â It also dabbled in election denial with a panel called âThey Stole it From Us Legally.â There was also a speech from Brazilian strongman Jair Bolsonaro, who has headed up his own election denial movement complete with a storming of that countryâs capital.
Along with these more fringe events, CPAC drew the GOP establishment. Planned speakers included former president (and 2024 candidate) Donald Trump and his only major declared rival Nikki Haley. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a likely candidate, was also set to speak while two other probable candidates, Ron DeSantis and Mike Pence, stayed away amid the Schlapp controversy.
Outside the event, based on videos he posted on Telegram, Fuentesâ supporters walked the streets around the venue and hurled bigoted vitriol at prominent CPAC attendees.
âYou work for Jews! Whatâs wrong with you,â they shouted at one man.
âYouâre on a gay date!â they yelled at another.
Fuentes, who said heâd found a venue to host a rally of his own on Saturday, posted screengrabs of the conference mocking the lack of crowds.
âThis is crazy, he wrote. âTotally empty room for Don Jr.â
As former President Trump so often said, âSad!â