The former American president, Donald Trump, will claim full control of the Republican Party in his speech next Sunday in Orlando, the first he will give after leaving the White House.

“The message will be: I may not have Twitter or the Oval Office, but I am still in office”. They have transferred sources from their surroundings to the Axios digital portal.

According to these, Trump wants to introduce himself as him “Presumable candidate” facing the 2024 elections by the Republicans, although it is not yet clear if he will finally run for it.

Trump is effectively the Republican Party. When you attack the president Trump, you are attacking the republican bases”, The former president’s advisor, Jason Miller, has assured said media.

Money and data for ‘Trumpists’

The political committee of Trump He received numerous donations during the months in which he upheld the unproven thesis of electoral fraud. It currently has US $ 75 million to finance Republican candidates who run in the internal primaries for the congressional and one-third Senate elections to be held next year.

According to this information, the idea of Trump is to use these donations to promote ‘Trumpist’ candidates, close to him, to help him dismount in the primaries those Republicans who have supported the ‘impeachment’, those labeled by their environment as RINO (Republicans in name only, in their translation from English).

The former president will meet with his advisers to design his strategy during this week in which he also has another important asset: the data of tens of millions of Americans that he has collected over the last five years.

The fate of non-Trumpists

Among Republicans who will presumably be challenged by candidates supported by TrumpThere will be some who have spoken openly against him or have held him responsible for the Assault on the Capitol, such as Wyoming Congresswoman Liz Cheeney.

Like her, many figures who have shown themselves against the New York tycoon have been “Censored” -a figure typical of US politics equivalent to a reprimand- by ​​the party in its home states.

The last great Republican figure to come under the wrath of Trump It has been the minority leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, who, although he voted in favor of his acquittal in the impeachment process in the Senate, later criticized his performance in the Assault on the Capitol.

In a statement published last week, the former president assured that if the Republican senators kept the senator from Kentucky as their leader “they were not going to win again” and that at such an important moment for the country the Republicans “they could not allow third-rate leaders to decide their future.”

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