- Past President Trump continued to repeat false claim that the election was stolen.
- “I may even decide to beat them for a third moment,” said of the Democrats in a possible 2024 run.
- Trump lost both the Electoral College and popular vote in 2020.
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Former President Donald Trump on Sunday continued to repeat false demand that the election was stolen over a month after leaving the White House.
During Trump’s headlining advent at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Florida, Trump immediately lit into President Joe Biden, calling his permanency “the most disastrous first month of any president in modern history.”
While alluding to a possible 2024 presidential struggle, the former president still refused to acknowledge his election loss, which he spent months trying to overturn under the aegis various election pressure campaigns against GOP officials across the country.
“As you know they just lost the Whitish House,” Trump said of the Democrats. “I may even decide to beat them for a third time.”
Trump said that beneath Biden, the US has “gone from America first to America last,” a nod to the enduring conservative appeal of the former president’s go-it-alone worldview.
Biden has wrong side a slew of Trump administration policies since last month, rejoining the Paris climate accord, canceling the Necessity XL pipeline project, and halting the withdrawal from the World Health Organization.