Trump will tell CPAC that he does NOT want to break from the GOP and form his own party

Trump will tell CPAC he does NOT want to break from the GOP and form his own party and will call on Republicans to unite behind him: Aides say ‘buckle up’ for ‘electric speech’

  • Donald Trump will announce Sunday that he will not form his own political party
  • ‘We are not starting new parties, and we will not be dividing our power and our strength,’ Trump will say, according to an excerpt of the speech obtained by Fox
  • Instead, the former president will call on the GOP to unite behind, saying: ‘We will be united and strong like never before’ 
  • The former president’s speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference Sunday will be his first public appearance since leaving office last month 
  • Fox reports Trump will walk ‘right up to the line of announcing another campaign’ during his speech, without actually committing 

Donald Trump is expected to announce in his speech Sunday that he will not start his own party, but instead call for Republicans to unite as he returns to the political limelight in a keynote address at the Conservative Political Actions Conference.

‘We are not starting new parties, and we will not be dividing our power and our strength. Instead, we will be united and strong like never before,’ Trump will say, according to an excerpt of the speech obtained by Fox News.

Although Trump won’t officially announce anything in regards to his political future, Fox reports he will walk ‘right up to the line of announcing another campaign’ to take back the White House from President Joe Biden in 2024.

The speech is expected to last 90 minutes, minimum. 

Donald Trump will announce Sunday during his CPAC speech that he will not form his own political party: ‘We are not starting new parties, and we will not be dividing our power and our strength’

In calling for the Party to come together, Trump will also outline a ‘pathway’ for taking back the majority in Congress in 2022, including pushing his repeated claims of voter fraud and proposing ways to stop it.

The news that Trump will commit to the GOP comes after rumors emerged last month that he was considering creating his own political party and breaking with Republicans. 

Stripped of his Twitter account, Trump’s only means of communication with the public have been through occasional statements released from the ‘Office of the 45th President’, which he formed after leaving Washington.

He also broke his media silence earlier this month when he joined Fox News by phone for a tribute to conservative radio personality Rush Limbaugh, who died of cancer.