The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), a stalwart of American right-wing politics for years, has been at the center of global controversy. French far-right leader Jordan Bardella canceled his planned speech at the conference in a sudden move after former Trump aide Steve Bannon performed a hand gesture that most experts and advocacy groups saw as a Nazi salute.
The action by Bardella, the 28-year-old leader of France’s National Rally party, highlights the growingly strained ideological fault lines of global conservatism and creates new fears about the normalization of extremist iconography in mainstream political rhetoric.
The Incident: Bannon’s Provocative Gesture
At the end of his Thursday night CPAC speech, Bannon—who helped orchestrate Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential win—ended his incendiary remarks with a raised right arm, fingers extended downward. Although some say this was just a rhetorical gesture, historians and anti-hate organizations quickly pointed out its similarity to the Nazi salute, a gesture that is irretrievably linked to Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich.
The gesture immediately provoked outrage, with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and other groups decrying it as a clear nod to fascist ideology. The response was rapid and vociferous, with media and political commentators arguing over whether the gesture was deliberate provocation or an embarrassing mistake.
Bardella’s Response: A Firm Rejection
Bardella, who had travelled to Washington to talk about European politics and U.S.-France relations, said he would not be linked with such an image.
“Yesterday, in the absence from the room, one of the speakers granted himself, in provocation, a gesture evoking Nazi ideology,” Bardella said, and declared that he had taken the spontaneous decision to withdraw from the event out of principle.
This action is especially significant in light of the past of Bardella’s National Rally, previously the National Front, a party established by Jean-Marie Le Pen, who has been accused of minimizing Nazi war atrocities. The party, under Marine Le Pen and now Bardella, has sought to rebrand itself as a more centrist nationalist movement, separating itself from its radicalized past.
Bardella’s boycott of CPAC because of Bannon’s actions is the most severe condemnation yet by a European far-right leader of a previously untouchable figure in the Trump movement.
CPAC’s Evolution: From Conservatism to Populist Spectacle
CPAC has changed dramatically in recent years. What was once a forum for mainstream conservative policy debates has become an all-out Trumpian rally. Bannon’s address embodied this transformation, combining anti-establishment rhetoric with populist fervour—even suggesting a 2028 Trump presidential bid, despite U.S. presidential term limits.
His words were greeted with cheers of “We want Trump!” from the audience, solidifying the event’s alignment with Trumpism rather than traditional Republican conservatism.
Adding to the drama, Elon Musk, another marquee speaker, caused a stir of his own. Musk, already under fire for a similar gesture at a U.S. presidential inauguration, took the stage holding a chainsaw, a theatrical prop intended to represent his combative budget-cutting across federal agencies. It was presented to him by Argentina’s polarizing right-wing President, Javier Milei.
The Global Repercussions: Increasing Fears About Far-Right Symbolism
The incident at CPAC is part of a broader trend in which far-right leaders and influencers flirt with controversial imagery, testing the boundaries of acceptability.
Historians and experts have pointed out that the so-called “Roman salute”, often used as a defense against accusations of Nazi affiliation, was not actually a Roman tradition, but rather a 20th-century invention popularized by Mussolini’s fascists before being adopted by Hitler.
Bannon’s deployment of the gesture, conscious or otherwise, contributes to wider fears that hard-right leaders are pushing the limits of public tolerance for extremist symbolism—and that parts of their audience are all the more ready to accept it.
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