In the corner of the brightly lit, heavily bannered conference hall for this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference in Dallas, an empty jail cell sets the scene of a Make America Great Again performance art piece. A sign fixed to the exterior of the cell warns “#younext.” The would-be prisoner is an actor playing the part of a Jan. 6 insurrectionist.
The diorama painted a sympathetic portrait of the rioters arrested for their roles attacking the nation’s Capitol in protest of an election that saw the defeat of former President Donald Trump.
The display was emblematic of the overall attitude of the annual event for the nation’s most die-hard conservatives. There was virtually no acknowledgement by attendees of the conference of Trump’s role in instigating the attack, which has been the focus of testimony presented by the U.S. House committee investigating the insurrection in recents months. Trump, who closed out the event, was welcomed with open arms by Texans and those who traveled to the state to see him, as he has been teasing a 2024 presidential run.
“I’m over the moon, I’ve been trying to see him for years,” said Therese Boehnlein, who drove from Waco to see Trump.
Trump spent his time on stage handing out endorsements ahead of the November midterms, naming a number of Texans, including U.S. Rep. Beth Van Duyne, R-Irving; and his former White House doctor, U.S. Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-Amarillo.
Trump stuck to a familiar script and repeated the falsehood that the 2020 election was stolen from him, even as those claims have repeatedly been debunked by even his own former aides. He painted cities run by Democratic leadership as hellscapes awash in crime and lamented what he described as an open southern border with Mexico.
“We created the safest border in U.S. history by far, by far. And now it’s the worst border ever in history,” said Trump of President Joe Biden’s administration.
Trump also derided what he described as the indoctrination of students by liberals intent on destroying traditional family values, touching on battles in public schools over the content of library books, what sports teams transgender students are allowed to play on, and how teachers are allowed to talk about race and history.
Trump received some of his most thunderous applause of the night with his suggestion to “abolish the Department of Education.”
For Anna Zimmerman of Dallas, Trump’s focus on education resonated most with her.
“I liked his plans for the future,” Zimmerman told The Texas Tribune as attendees filed out of the conference room. “We’ve got to do something about our educational system. We won’t be successful if we teach them about transgenderism.”
Zimmerman said she expects and looks forward to an announcement from Trump that he’ll run again for president.
“Everything is timing and he is a man of perfect timing,” Zimmerman said.
A straw poll conducted at the conference found that Trump is still a favorite among attendees. Trump received 69% of the vote to be the 2024 Republican nominee for president. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis came in second with 24%. Texas’s own Sen. Ted Cruz, who spoke at the conference on Friday, came in third with 2%.
Though he’d hoped to see Trump announce his 2024 run at the convention, Ariel Kohane said he expects Trump will announce after the midterm elections, so he can focus on endorsements. “Trump will have the greatest impact ever on the midterms. He selects winners,” said Kohane, who traveled from New York to see Trump.
Jen Loh Salinas of San Antonio, the vice president of Latinos United for America, said Trump — and his border wall — are the key to America’s success. Born and raised in Laredo, Salinas said that border communities are scared of the violence that she attributed to migrants crossing the border.
She doesn’t just blame Biden. Salinas also criticized Gov. Greg Abbott’s handling of the border. She called his busing of migrants to Washington, D.C., “human trafficking.” On Friday, Abbott announced Texas is now busing migrants from Texas to New York City.
With her teenage daughter next to her, Salinas pointed to schools as one of the major reasons she said Latino voters were moving to the right. Salinas took her daughter out of public school because she thinks they are “sexualizing children” — a common refrain used by attendees and speakers describing public school concerns at the convention, alluding to the discussion of gender identity. She said the cost of private school is worth what she sees as the best education for her daughter.
Elizabeth Gomez-Crocker also took her children out of public school, citing among other things, critical race theory, an academic framework that teaches structural racism exists in America, but which educators say isn’t being taught in Texas public schools. Working as a substitute teacher, Gomez-Crocker picked up a second job driving for Uber to pay for the cost of the private, religious school in Arlington.