Long term: Play RINO and become a precinct committee person and work your way into positions of influence. Bring other like minded people with you. Then, co-opt them. That is how the commies took the democrat party, though the democrats weren't all that averse to communism being democrats. RINOS, being uniparty, are averse to conservatives.
Is there a way which involves giving the right people money? or votes? How does someone et on the committee?
I'm not conservative and many other Trump supporters aren't either -- but the corporate stooges would oppose people such as myself also.
The right people involves carefully vetting candidates (tough to do since most politicians are practiced liars). Then you donate directly to their campaign and volunteer directly for them, not the party. As to becoming a precinct person, which is the real power post in a political party, you get there by going to the monthly meetings for that party. They are usually on the party website.
Spend some time listening carefully to the party line and figuring out how to talk to people without ruffling feathers.
Then, volunteer for any crap jobs that come up. Get to know your precinct captain if you have one. Help them, see what they do, and position yourself so if they leave they recommend you. If you DON'T have one (not uncommon at all in blue cities), get to know the regulars and find the required number of people in your precinct to nominate you. This is usually easy if there isn't one in place, since nobody wants the job. It's thankless work and generally a pain in the ass position in a blue city or area. Precinct captains are the ones that get out the vote. They are the ground game during election season.
Over time if you do a good job, you move higher in the organization. At the mid levels and higher life gets tough because it is a lot of pay to play. So networking in your local business community comes in handy.
But getting the committee seats is key because those people are the ones that vote on the higher offices, platform and policies.
ETA: sometimes registered independents paradoxically become more influential by campaigning for and donating directly to conservative candidates because that shows the candidate is widening "the base". So if you could find a MAGA person to run for a small local office and get them in against the odds as independents, though they are on the ticket as R, that person would be watched closely.
When choosing a MAGA candidate, choose carefully, choose one that can speak to the center (independents) and run them for a small local office nobody really cares about first. We really need good people on school boards, for instance. Even if they run as an R, and they are not against an establishment R, they will likely get little or no help from the local Rs if the Rs are working with the Ds. So outside funding and ground game are critical in such a case.
Don't give them money.
Long term: Play RINO and become a precinct committee person and work your way into positions of influence. Bring other like minded people with you. Then, co-opt them. That is how the commies took the democrat party, though the democrats weren't all that averse to communism being democrats. RINOS, being uniparty, are averse to conservatives.
Is there a way which involves giving the right people money? or votes? How does someone et on the committee? I'm not conservative and many other Trump supporters aren't either -- but the corporate stooges would oppose people such as myself also.
The right people involves carefully vetting candidates (tough to do since most politicians are practiced liars). Then you donate directly to their campaign and volunteer directly for them, not the party. As to becoming a precinct person, which is the real power post in a political party, you get there by going to the monthly meetings for that party. They are usually on the party website.
Spend some time listening carefully to the party line and figuring out how to talk to people without ruffling feathers.
Then, volunteer for any crap jobs that come up. Get to know your precinct captain if you have one. Help them, see what they do, and position yourself so if they leave they recommend you. If you DON'T have one (not uncommon at all in blue cities), get to know the regulars and find the required number of people in your precinct to nominate you. This is usually easy if there isn't one in place, since nobody wants the job. It's thankless work and generally a pain in the ass position in a blue city or area. Precinct captains are the ones that get out the vote. They are the ground game during election season.
Over time if you do a good job, you move higher in the organization. At the mid levels and higher life gets tough because it is a lot of pay to play. So networking in your local business community comes in handy.
But getting the committee seats is key because those people are the ones that vote on the higher offices, platform and policies.
ETA: sometimes registered independents paradoxically become more influential by campaigning for and donating directly to conservative candidates because that shows the candidate is widening "the base". So if you could find a MAGA person to run for a small local office and get them in against the odds as independents, though they are on the ticket as R, that person would be watched closely.
When choosing a MAGA candidate, choose carefully, choose one that can speak to the center (independents) and run them for a small local office nobody really cares about first. We really need good people on school boards, for instance. Even if they run as an R, and they are not against an establishment R, they will likely get little or no help from the local Rs if the Rs are working with the Ds. So outside funding and ground game are critical in such a case.