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CPAC Helped Bring The ‘Alt-Right’ Into The Conservative Movement. Now Insists It Wants Them Out.

This week, the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), the annual right-wing summit hosted by the American Conservative Union (ACU), plans(link is external) to feature a speech titled “The Alt Right Ain’t Right at All” by ACU executive director Dan Schneider.

Schneider’s planned speech on the dangers of the racist Alt-Right comes just as its adherents are finding success in shaping President Trump’s ideas and his White House team.

While recognizing the need for a speech denouncing the Alt-Right, CPAC nonetheless(link is external) asked Alt-Right apologist Milo Yiannopoulos to be its keynote speaker, only to later withdraw the invitation after critics pointed out Yiannopoulos’ past remarks(link is external) about sex between adults and young teenagers. In addition, ACU chairman Matt Schlapp plans to host White House strategist Steve Bannon, who bragged about turning Breitbart into “the platform for the Alt-Right(link is external),” for an interview on the main stage.

And while conference organizers move to condemn racism, CPAC may also want to reflect on its own history with white nationalist activists. While the summit has barred(link is external) gay and pro-gay conservative organizations in the past, it has had no problem hosting leaders of the Alt-Right.

In past years(link is external), CPAC hosted Youth for Western Civilization, a group so far to the right that it defended the Confederacy(link is external) and South Africa’s apartheid system(link is external). In 2011 the conference even offered YWC a panel about how immigration and multiculturalism(link is external) threaten to destroy not only the GOP but also American society(link is external). The Anti-Defamation League reported(link is external) at the time that the panel was also attended by two “well-known racists, Jared Taylor, who runs the white supremacist journal American Renaissance and William Johnson, the chairman of the American Third Position, a white supremacist political party.”

In 2012, a CPAC panel(link is external) on multiculturalism included Peter Brimelow(link is external), the Alt-Right figure(link is external) who founded the white nationalist outlet VDARE(link is external); John Derbyshire(link is external), a VDARE contributor(link is external) who was fired by the National Review(link is external) for his racist(link is external) writings(link is external); and white nationalist Bob Vandervoort(link is external).

Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, also made an appearance at that panel(link is external)—which attacked multiculturalism as a “disease”—and praised Brimelow(link is external), calling himself a fan of his books. (Brimelow recently addressed(link is external) an Alt-Right gathering in Washington, D.C., that featured Nazi salutes(link is external)). Vandervoort, for his part, continued to sponsor CPAC for several years(link is external).

For years, the summit also hosted(link is external) the ultraconservative John Birch Society(link is external), which notoriously criticized the civil rights movement.

Not to be overlooked, of course, is CPAC’s decision to host Donald Trump, who conveniently became a major donor(link is external) to the American Conservative Union in the years leading up to his presidential bid.  As Kenneth Vogel of Politico noted(link is external), Trump’s relationship with CPAC’s organizers “provided valuable entry into conservative circles as he was just beginning to increase his political profile.”

It was at CPAC conferences where Trump outlined may of the(link is external) same(link is external) themes(link is external) he later deployed in his campaign, particularly immigrant-bashing(link is external).

Back in 2011, he told the crowd that “our country will be great again(link is external)” if they elect him president.

CPAC not only helped transform Trump’s image from a bumbling birther into a credible conservative, but it also gave a platform to figures pushing the kind of xenophobia and racism that helped pave the way for Trump’s successful presidential campaign.