3/04/2021

Former President Donald Trump reappeared this Sunday at the Orlando Conservative Political Action Conference with a speech full of criticisms of the policies launched by his successo

 

Former President Donald Trump reappeared this Sunday at the Orlando Conservative Political Action Conference with a speech full of criticisms of the policies launched by his successor, Joe Biden and in which he opened the door to be a candidate for the presidency of the United States again in 2024.


"Who knows, who knows. He might even decide to beat them a third time," he said in reference to his Democratic rivals.

"A Republican president will return to the White House. I wonder who it could be," he added.

Before an audience of supporters, Trump insisted without providing evidence that he lost in the 2020 elections because they were "rigged" and called on his followers to keep his political movement active.

"No matter how much the established power in Washington and the powerful special interests want to silence us, let there be no doubt. We will be victorious and America will be stronger and bigger than ever," he said.

The former president extinguished rumors that he could create a new party, but made it clear that he will continue to have activity within the Republican Party. "I'm not going to create a new party. We have the Republican Party. It's going to come together and get stronger than ever before."

Before a devoted public, Trump did not save on attacks against Biden, to whom he attributed "the most disastrous first month of any president in modern history", and was especially devastating with the immigration reform plan that Biden promotes in Congress of which He said that if passed, it would make the United States "a sanctuary" for irregular immigration.

Having overcome the "impeachment" for his role in the assault on the Capitol on January 6, Trump seems determined to compete for the leadership of the Republican Party or, at least, to maintain his influence.

Trump has maintained public differences with some Republican leaders critical of his performance at the end of his term, such as the leader of the Republican minority in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, and charged against the members of the Party who have marked distances with him and will seek re-election in the 2022 midterm elections.



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