News Analysis

CPAC Dallas To Host Trump, Cruz, Abbott and Hungarian Autocrat, Viktor Orbán

Viktor Orbán, the far-right Hungarian prime minister who last week denounced “race mixing,” is slated to speak today at the GOP conference in Dallas. Orban was widely rebuked after he made a speech arguing that Europeans should not “become peoples of mixed race.” 

Orban also seemingly joked during the speech about Nazi gas chambers, saying in regards to proposed natural gas rationing, “the past shows us German know-how on that.”

One of Orban’s aides, Zsuzsa Hegedüs, who is Jewish, resigned in disgust after calling his comments “pure Nazi text worthy of Goebbels” and the “racist” culmination of an increasingly “illiberal turn.” 

The United States denounced the comments as “inexcusable,” and U.S. envoy against anti-Semitism Deborah Lipstadt added that she was “deeply alarmed” by the “use of rhetoric that clearly evokes Nazi racial ideology.”  

The International Auschwitz Committee of Holocaust survivors criticized Orban’s remarks as “stupid and dangerous” and demanded other E.U. leaders “make it clear to the world that [a leader like] Mr. Orban has no future in Europe.”

The Washington Post editorial board said last week that Orban, who runs “a country whose GDP is more meager than that of Kansas and whose population is smaller than Michigan’s, has become a role model for America’s right-wing populists who admire his blueprint for dismantling democracy” and for attacking “woke” culture.

“Shunned in Western Europe,” they continued “he naturally goes where he is appreciated,” and “will arrive to what is likely to be an adoring welcome at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference.”

According to their website, the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, “is the largest and most influential gathering of conservatives in the world. Launched in 1974, CPAC brings together hundreds of conservative organizations, thousands of activists, millions of viewers and the best and brightest leaders in the world.” The conference runs Thursday through Sunday at the Hilton Anatole in Dallas. 

The theme of this year’s conference is “Awake, not woke.” Former President Donald Trump is keynote speaker for the main event Saturday night. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott,  Lt. Gov Dan Patrick, Sen. Ted Cruz, and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton are all scheduled to speak throughout the weekend.

Other notable speakers include Fox News commentator Sean Hannity, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Rep. Lauren Boebert, former HUD Secretary Ben Carson, MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. 

Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon is the headliner for Saturday night’s Cattleman’s Ball, a high-dollar CPAC-associated fundraiser.

Portions of the convention will be livestreamed on CPAC’s website. CSPAN will also air some segments.

Nick Anderson

Writer, editor, photographer and editorial cartoonist Nick Anderson has joined the Reform Austin newsroom, where he will employ the artistic skill and political insights that earned a Pulitzer Prize to drive coverage of Texas government. As managing editor, Anderson is responsible for guiding Reform Austin’s efforts to give readers the unfiltered facts they need to hold Texas leaders accountable. Anderson’s original cartoons will be a regular feature on RA News. “Reform Austin readers understand the consequences of electing politicians who use ideological agendas to divide us, when they should be doing the hard work necessary to make our state government work for everyone,” Anderson said. “As a veteran journalist, I’m excited about Reform Austin’s potential to re-focus conversations on the issues that matter to common-sense Texans – like protecting our neighborhoods from increasingly common disasters, healthcare, just to name a few.” Anderson worked for the Houston Chronicle, the largest newspaper in Texas, from 2006 until 2017. In addition to the Pulitzer, Anderson earned the Society of Professional Journalists’ Sigma Delta Chi Award. He’s also a two-time winner of Columbia College’s Fischetti Award, and the National Press Foundation’s Berryman Award. Anderson’s cartoons have been published in Newsweek, the New York Times, the Washington Post, USA Today, the Chicago Tribune and other papers. In 2005, Anderson won the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning while working for the Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky. The judges complimented his “unusual graphic style that produced extraordinarily thoughtful and powerful messages.”

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