When Donald Trump appeared at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) last weekend, the former president made the argument that his party is cohesive — sort of.
“The Republican Party is united…. I think we have tremendous unity,” Trump boasted. He quickly added, however, that the only thing standing in the way of true intra-party cohesion is the group of “establishment political hacks” in the nation’s capital.
Late last week, the former president’s lawyers sent the “establishment political hacks” an unexpected letter.
Attorneys for former President Donald Trump sent cease-and-desist letters Friday to three Republican organizations asking them to stop using the former president’s name and likeness in fundraising appeals and merchandise, a Trump adviser said Saturday…. Politico was first to report the news.
At this point, the Republican Party is sorely lacking in national leaders. Indeed, the party is often derided as a “cult of personality” for a reason: it’s national identity overlaps entirely with a former television personality who served one failed term as president, whom many Republican voters continue to revere to a creepy degree.
With that in mind, when the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee, and the National Republican Senate Committee send out fundraising appeals, they rely heavily — if not exclusively — on Trump’s name and image to keep their base engaged, motivated, and reaching for their wallets.
Except, the former president no longer wants them to. The Republican Party has “tremendous unity,” Trump says, unless the party tries to use him to solicit money for themselves.








