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Tag: Conservative Political Action Committee

  • Ads for Republican and Democratic groups appear under pro-Nazi, racist posts on X

    Ads for Republican and Democratic groups appear under pro-Nazi, racist posts on X

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    Paid advertisements for major organizations affiliated with both the Republican and Democratic parties and some of their biggest names have appeared under pro-Nazi and racist posts shared on Elon Musk’s social media platform X, formerly Twitter, a CBS News investigation has found.

    Advertisements for the Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) and the right-wing Heritage Foundation think tank have appeared recently under racist or pro-Nazi posts from verified accounts on X. 

    Last week, the World Bank ceased all paid advertising on X after a CBS News investigation found a promoted advertisement from the organization showed up under a racist post from an account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and white nationalist content. The World Bank made the decision to remove all paid advertising on X, calling the incident “entirely unacceptable,” after a promoted advertisement under a racist post was flagged to the organization by CBS News.

    Republican and Democratic-affiliated ads under racist posts

    One of the U.S. political ads found by CBS News was under a post by a verified account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and racist content. The account, which has nearly 100,000 followers, shared a picture of Hitler rejecting a Star of David being held by an arm draped in a striped sleeve.

    One of the U.S. political ads found by CBS News was under a post by a verified account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and racist content.

    X screenshot


    Under the post, an ad appeared for the National Republican Senatorial Committee directing users to donate through WinRed, the prominent conservative online fundraising platform used by many GOP candidates and groups, including GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign and the Republican National Committee. 

    The advertisement showed an image of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio with the caption saying it was “paid for by the NRSC.”

    The NRSC is the chief fundraising committee dedicated to getting Republican Party candidates elected to the U.S. Senate. Multiple other promoted advertisements directing users to WinRed were posted under similar content. CBS News is not publicly identifying the accounts spreading racist content on X. 

    CBS News asked the NRSC and WinRed for comment about the placement of the fundraising ads on X. In response to questions about the ads on X, NRSC spokesman Mike Berg wrote in a post on the platform that CBS News was, “trying to pressure advertisers to stop spending money on X by associating advertisers and [Musk] with white nationalists,” which he called “patently absurd.”

    Promoted advertisements for the congressional campaign of Jerrad Christan, the Democratic candidate for Ohio’s 12th district, also appeared under antisemitic posts. The seat is currently held by Republican Troy Balderson. 

    A post by a verified account with 150,000 followers showed a man with a boot on his neck underneath the Statue of Liberty. The text on the image read, “Land of Freedom. Where one is ruled by the Jews, Freedom is only an empty dream.” 

    Christian’s campaign ad appeared under the image with a link that redirected readers to ActBlue, a fundraising platform used widely by Democratic campaigns. 

    Under another post by the same account, CBS News found an ad for the National Republican Senatorial Committee – a paid advertisement from Mary Trump’s political action committee, the Democracy Defense Fund, with a link to the Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue. Mary Trump, the former U.S. president’s niece, has spoken out against her uncle for years.

    The post in question depicted an Orthodox Jewish man dancing on a gravesite with the caption: “Your reminder to NOT die for shlomo. He’ll dance on your graves.”

    The PAC advertisement under the post had an image of Mary Trump with a request to donate money to help “defeat Donald, defend the Senate, and flip the House.” 

    CBS News has sought comment from the Jerrad Christian for Congress campaign and Mary Trump’s PAC on the placement of the organizations’ ads. 

    Money for content on Elon Musk’s X

    Since Musk’s October 2022 takeover of what was then Twitter, he has dismantled safeguards on the platform. That includes dramatic changes to the verification system and the removal of its Trust and Safety advisory group, as well as changes to broader content moderation and hate speech enforcement on X.

    In its place, Musk has created a system in which X’s algorithms favor accounts that pay for the platform’s blue check subscription service. According to X’s own marketing for its verification service, X premium offers “reply prioritization” for all subscribers. 

    The changes also enable influencers who buy into the verification subscription program to monetize their content. Subscribers are eligible to receive a share of advertising revenue for their content if they “have at least 5M organic impressions on cumulative posts within the last 3 months” and “have at least 500 followers.”

    Under X’s terms of use, accounts can do this without publicly disclosing their identity, provided the account holder privately discloses their ID to the platform. 

    “X allows the use of pseudonymous accounts, meaning an account’s profile is not required to use the name or image of the account owner. Accounts that appear similar to others on X are not in violation of this policy, so long as their purpose is not to deceive or manipulate others,” according to the platform’s guidelines. 

    A majority of the verified X accounts reviewed by CBS News that have political advertising under their content would, according to the company’s own guidelines, qualify for a share of its ad revenue under the policy.

    Does X have the capacity to control hate speech?

    Last week, the World Bank ceased all paid advertising on X after a CBS News investigation found a promoted advertisement from the organization showed up under a racist post from an account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and white nationalist content. 

    Sander van der Linden, a professor of social psychology at the University of Cambridge who studies online misinformation, told CBS News on Friday that X’s algorithms may be determining where to place advertisements based on which accounts are getting the most engagement. 

    “When they’ve [X] had problems with companies like IBM or Disney where they had complained that their ads were appearing next to Nazi content, these Nazi accounts were getting millions of impressions,” van der Linden said. “I’m assuming what’s happening there is that the algorithm is recommending to place the ads next to content that’s getting a lot of engagement to try to maximize reach.”

    Van der Linden has said that since Musk’s takeover of the social media platform in 2022, the removal of content moderation measures has led to an explosion in hate speech content. 

    “He [Musk] doesn’t have the tools to moderate, down rank and demonetize that content,” van der Linden told CBS News. “Musk has claimed that hate speech doesn’t get any ad revenue… but I think the fact of the matter is that there’s so much of it now that actually I haven’t seen any evidence that would suggest that people can’t profit off it.” 

    CBS News has repeatedly asked X whether the accounts flagged as part of its investigation are profiting from sharing pro-Nazi and racist content, and about the placement of advertising on its platform. There had been no reply from the company as of the time of publication.

    While CBS News found advertisements from groups affiliated with both main U.S. political parties, far fewer Democratic political ads than Republican ads appeared under such racist content. 

    One post from a verified account with more than 160,000 followers showed an image of an animated superhero with the caption: “antisemites will save the world.”

    A promoted advertisement for the NRSC came up under that post with a link guiding readers to donate and an image of Mr. Trump, with the caption: “Is the Media fair to Trump?” 

    In total, CBS News found political fundraising advertisements promoting GOP groups and candidates under at least 10 different posts from accounts known to promote pro-Nazi and racist content. 

    Advertisements for the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank have also appeared under an antisemitic post from an account known to share pro-Nazi content. The account in question has more than 150,000 followers. CBS News has asked The Heritage Foundation to comment on the placement of its advertisements on X. 

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  • Trump says

    Trump says

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    Fort Washington, Maryland  — In his keynote address at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) Saturday evening, former President Donald Trump aired grievances with his familiar foes: President Biden, the Department of Justice, and the litany of legal fights he is embroiled in.

    But Trump, now an official presidential candidate who is expected to see a crowded field of other challengers, also took subdued shots at his potential opponents, and argued that any GOP option that’s not him represents an establishment “we’re never going back to.”

    “This is the final battle,” he said. 

    Key Speakers At Conservative Political Action Conference
    Former President Donald Trump speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, on March 4, 2023. 

    Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    He also argued the experience of his first term is a plus: “Now I am experienced and I know the people of Washington.”

    “We’ll appropriately deal with the RINOs,” he said, referencing the moniker for “Republicans In Name Only.” “We will never go back to the party of Paul Ryan, Karl Rove and Jeb Bush.”

    Rove held a donor conference in Austin, Texas, last week featuring several potential 2024 candidates, while Ryan, the 2012 GOP vice presidential nominee, has said he’ll support “anybody but Trump” in the 2024 race. 

    Trump took note of how some Republicans, without naming them — such as his former Vice President Mike Pence, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, and Nikki Haley, former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. — have supported reforms to social security and medicare

    “We are never going back to the people that want to destroy our great social security system … even some in our own party, I wonder who that might be,” he said. 

    On foreign policy, another issue that has divided Trump from other potential opponents, he repeatedly talked about preventing further U.S. intervention in wars, and claimed he “will prevent, very easily, World War III. And you’re going to have World War III if something doesn’t happen fast.”

    Trump frequently brought up the multiple subpoenas he’s received regarding both his handling of classified documents found at his resort in Mar-a-Lago, to his role in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S.  Capitol that was investigated by a House select committee. 

    Trump is also facing a civil lawsuit from New York Attorney General Letitia James, who alleges the former president and his business committed fraud by manipulating his property values to his benefit. He is also facing an investigation in Georgia over his attempts to overturn his loss in the state in the 2020 general election.

    Trump called James and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, both of whom are Black women, as “racist.”

    “Every time the polls get higher and higher, the prosecutors get crazier and crazier,” Trump said, joking that he didn’t know the word “subpoena” until after he became president. 

    “They’re not coming after me, they’re coming after you, and that’s why I’m standing here today. I’m standing before you because we’re going to finish what we started. We’re going to complete the mission,” Trump, who launched his third bid for the presidency in November 2022, told the supportive CPAC crowd that frequently chanted “four more years!”

    Trump also alleged he “won the second election,” a continuation of his baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen. The rhetoric has been cited by Republicans publicly as a reason for the party’s lackluster performance in the 2022 midterm elections.

    Election denial was somewhat of a theme among speakers at this year’s CPAC, with failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake giving a keynote address on Friday night. Trump’s former White House adviser, Steve Bannon, who led “Stop the Steal” efforts on Jan. 6, also was a featured speaker, and held live broadcasts of his Infowars show in the CPAC media row.

    Trump added that, if elected, he would crack down on purported “out of control monsters” which he claimed were causing crime across the country. Trump suggested that the federal government should “take over control and management” of Washington, D.C., because of high crime rates. 

    Prior to his speech, Trump cleared the conference’s straw poll — which CPAC says 2,000 attendees completed — with 62% of the vote. DeSantis, thought of as Trump’s most formidable rival in part due to his history of fundraising and rankings in early polls on the primary, was second with 20% of the vote. 

    The event, which usually attracts a number of presidential hopefuls beginning to launch their campaigns, featured only the other two candidates who have declared their candidacy, Haley, and biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy. Among the major GOP figures mulling a bid, only former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo addressed the conference. Several of them skipped out on CPAC and instead appeared at a donor retreat in Palm Beach, Florida, hosted by the conservative group Club for Growth

    The absence of the other possible contenders did not escape Trump’s notice. He posted on Truth Social Thursday, “The only reason certain ‘candidates’ won’t be going to CPAC is because the crowds have no interest in anything they have to say. They’ve heard it all before, and don’t want to hear it again.”

    The conference was filled with Trump allies and his former administration officials, both on the speaking lineup on the main stage, and in the numerous conservative media booths that line the hallways. 

    Before his keynote speech, Trump gave remarks to a private gathering at the conference with VIP donors and Republican figures, such as Lake, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and conservative commentator and lawyer Mark Levin. 

    From outside the room, he was heard saying he gets a subpoena “every time I fly over a blue state.”

    Greene, who has already announced she’s backing Trump, took questions from reporters Friday during which she criticized or dismissed Trump’s official and potential presidential primary opponents, such as Haley or Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who did not attend the conference. 

    “It’s nice that they’re running, but they’re not going to win,” Greene predicted when she was asked about the Republican politicians who opted not to attend the conference. 

    Though he hasn’t announced an official 2024 campaign yet, DeSantis is considered Trump’s biggest threat in a primary. Trump and his campaign have already gone on the attack against the Florida governor he endorsed in 2018, regularly referring to him as “Ron DeSanctimonious” and running Facebook ads showing a photo of DeSantis and Trump with the caption: “Pictured: An Apprentice Learning from the Master.”

    DeSantis has glossed over Trump’s criticism, and in a recent Fox News interview pointed to Trump’s 2018 support for him.

    “Then I win a big victory and all of a sudden, you know, he had different opinions, and so you can take that for what it’s worth,” DeSantis told Fox News on Tuesday.. 

    “I mean, he’s obviously a big, big fish, but I get attacked all the time from every different angle and you either put points on the board or you don’t. And so I just focus on delivering the wins. And I think we’ve done a pretty good job of following through on our promises,” DeSantis added.

    Haley, who spoke at CPAC on Friday and was greeted with chants of “Trump! Trump! Trump!” by his supporters as she was leaving the conference, took some shots at the former president during her remarks to the Club for Growth donor retreat on Saturday. 

    “The last two Republican presidents added more than $10 trillion to the national debt. Think about that. A third of our debt happened under just two Republicans,” said Haley, who has argued she represents the generational change needed for the party. “If we nominate another big spender in 2024, we’re going to lose.”

    Laura Thilman, a Republican voter from Arizona, said while “it’s way too early” to pick a presidential primary candidate, she’d vote for Trump “if I had to vote today.”

    “We need a president that’s going to come in and hit the ground running,” she said. “But here’s the deal, the best man wins. I’m not clairvoyant, I don’t know who that could be yet.”

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  • A New Conservative Alliance | CBS Reports

    A New Conservative Alliance | CBS Reports

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    A New Conservative Alliance | CBS Reports – CBS News


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    A segment of American conservatives has found inspiration in the success of the conservative cultural movement in Hungary. CPAC, the American Conservative Political Action Committee, is extolling President Viktor Orban’s anti-LGBTQ and nativist policies as the way forward for the United States. CBS Reports explores what the emerging alliance means for some U.S. conservatives’ vision for America.

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