NATIONAL HARBOR, Maryland — Most came to the conservative political gathering here to meet presidential hopefuls. But some younger attendees are also looking for a different kind of candidate.
“It’s a place where you can find a great candidate — for a husband,” said 19-year-old Erin Moore, a college student from Michigan’s Ferris State University.
Moore and her friends are in the Washington, D.C., area for the weekend, attending the Conservative Political Action Conference — a massive gathering of conservatives that is notable in part for drawing a lot of young people. The chance of meeting a potential spouse is a real pull, and Moore recalled meeting someone terrific on the first night. “When we were talking about views … I’d say, ‘I just think this way’ and he’d be like, ‘yeah, totally!’” she said. “We were compatible.”
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She is not the only one who feels that way. Members of the opposite sex share similar views. “If you are gonna go into politics, it’s a place to find a good wife, a first lady,” adds Jeff Ford, a friend of Moore’s from Ferris. “They’d support me and be active.”
Definitely looking for my future husband! #CPAC2015
— Erin Moore (@erinmoore2013) February 26, 2015
I've been at CPAC for one day and I've already gotten asked out on a date by a guy
— Miss President (@PApolitics1776) February 26, 2015
Dear Future Husband,
One day, we will go to CPAC. This isn't a want. It's a necessity.
Love,
Your Wife
— Chloe Craft (@chloecraft) February 26, 2015
To be sure, get enough young people — politically minded or not — in a room and the setting will likely be rife with romance and flush with furtive glances, but conservatives interviewed said they enjoyed the opportunity to meet like-minded people of the same age range.
Moore and her friends — Ford, 19, Mary Foster, 21, and Lauren Thomas, 19 — all say CPAC is an excellent environment to meet a date who might one day even become a lifelong spouse. Sitting in a small ballroom waiting for a meet and greet with Donald Trump, the friends shared stories of apathetic exes and political feuds with dates.
Foster recalls a guy she’d been talking to, but didn’t date because of politics.
“He basically thought I was small-minded because I believed in God and didn’t see the same views as him,” she recalls. “Why would you want to continue on with someone if you don’t have the same views?”
Ford and Moore had both dated people who just weren’t interested in politics.
“If you’re at CPAC, you care,” Moore says.
Foster said that she’s going into the medical field, but she would love to be married to a politician — making CPAC fertile dating territory.









