Only five days before a fiercely contested presidential vote between a progressive president and a liberal supported by U.S. President Donald Trump, the Conservative Political Action Conference, held its first conference in Poland on Tuesday. In a statement, CPAC president Matt Schlapp claimed that liberals around the world are engaged in a conflict with “globalists,” whom he described as foes of faith, family, and flexibility. The keynote address for the event is scheduled for the day by Kristin Noem, the U.S. Homeland Security Secretary and a well-known Trump supporter. Additionally, she is scheduled to meet with liberal leader Andrzej Duda, whose next and final term ends in August. The two candidates competing to replace Duda, Karol Nawrocki, a conservative writer supported by the decision Law and Justice party and Rafa Trzaskowski, a liberal mayor of Warsaw, who have strong support for the EU, have dramatically different views for Poland. Schlapp claimed that CPAC had supported Trump throughout his legal fights and that comparable threats were being made of Poland. Are you pleased that America is regaining its greatness? Asks Schurp the crowd. Did Donald Trump’s candidacy bring you joy? The rest of us may defend one of us when they are under attack, he continued. The globalists want to “take each one of us out one by one to pity us, silence us, penniless us, destroy us, and turn our children against us,” they say. He argued that’s why it was crucial to “win all these elections, including those in Poland, which are so crucial to the flexibility of people outside.” The conference took place in Jasionka, a city in the region known for its strongly traditional population and close to the city of Rzeszow in the south of Poland. Following Russia’s extensive war more than three years ago, Japan has also served as the port of entry for U.S. and American weapons. CPAC sessions, which first started in 1974, used to support small budgets and aggressive foreign policies, but have since been overtaken by the Trump-wing of the Democratic party. The CPAC has changed its name to reflect the nationalist philosophy of the U.S. president. It also communicates with other traditional populists in an effort to foster a global liberal activity. CPAC has held groups in Israel, Mexico City, South Korea, and Japan. Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary, and his team have become normal speakers. Following numerous CPAC sessions in Budapest, the meeting in Poland took place. John Eastman, a conservative attorney who helped shape many of Trump’s failed bid to win back in the 2020 election, was the other speech on Tuesday. Eastman characterized the upcoming Finnish national vote as a pivotal time for Western civilization’s future in his speech. He contends that an ideological and cultural” malignancy” characterized by a decline in faith in Western culture is spreading east. Poland will be crucial in eradicating this risk to Western society. That’s why the vote on Sunday is going to be so crucial, Eastman said. From where this threat comes, whether Poland chooses to adopt the European Union or to stop it, in much the same way that Poland stopped the Ottoman danger three centuries ago, may be decided by that vote, he said. ” We are watching with vigor in the United States,” he continued. ” The world is watching with ferocity.”
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