WASHINGTON – Former President of the United States, Donald J. Trump commutes from his New Jersey golf club to New York City at least once a week to work from his Trump Tower office.

The place is no longer the way it left it. Many of his long-term employees are gone. So have most of the family members who once worked with him there and some of the local furnishings, such as his former attorney Michael D. Cohen, who have since turned against him. Mr Trump works there, mostly alone, with two assistants and a couple of bodyguards.

His political engagement has also shrunk to a ragged team of former advisors still on his payroll, reminiscent of the naked characters who helped guide a political freshman to his unlikely victory in 2016. Most of them stay days or weeks without personally interacting with Mr. Trump.

But when he goes to the Republican Congress of North Carolina on Saturday night, labeled the resumption of rallies and speeches, Mr Trump is both a diminished figure and an oversized presence in American life with a notable – and many say dangerous – halt his party.

Even without his favorite megaphones and the trappings of office, Mr. Trump is enthroned over the political landscape, inspired by the lie that he won the 2020 elections and his own anger over his defeat. And unlike others with a complaint, he was able to impose his anger and preferred version of reality on a sizable segment of the American electorate – with the potential to sway the nation’s politics and weaken confidence in their elections for years to come.

He’s still blocked from Twitter and Facebook, but has struggled since leaving office to find a way to influence reporting and promote the invention that the 2020 elections were stolen from him.

Some party leaders, like Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, pretend he no longer exists while behaving respectfully when Mr. Trump cannot be ignored.

Others, like Florida Senator Rick Scott, have tried to flatter themselves by presenting Trump with fabricated awards to flatter his ego and involve him in helping Senate Republicans recapture a majority in 2022.

Presidential historian Michael Beschloss said Trump defied the model of ex-presidents who lose an election and tend to fade, and the experience of Richard M. Nixon in the way Trump is treated like an outcast has been refuted has managed to avoid.

Regarding being big and small at the same time, Mr. Beschloss said, “He is big when the yardstick is that politicians are afraid of him, which in Washington is a yardstick of power. Many Republican leaders are afraid of him and humiliate themselves in front of him. “

Jason Miller, an adviser to the former president, agreed to Trump’s control of the party.

“There are two types of Republicans within the Beltway,” Miller said. “Those who recognize that President Trump is the leader of the Republican Party and those who deny it.”

Even after losing, Mr Trump remains the front runner in every public poll so far for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination in 2024. Lawmakers who have questioned his dominance over the party, like Rep. Liz Cheney, the Republican from Wyoming, did hers Colleagues begged to reject him after his supporters’ uprising in the Capitol on January 6, were sacked by the Republican leadership.

From his strange dual roles of irrelevance and dominance, Mr. Trump has focused closely on three things – his repeated, false claims that the 2020 elections were “rigged” and his support for efforts to overturn the results; the state and local investigation into Trump Organization practices; and the state of his business.

Mr Trump, who said White House officials said he was delighted to watch his supporters storm the Capitol and disrupt the certification of the electoral college on Jan. 6, has told several people that he believes he will “go back into the world this August White House “could be used. according to three people familiar with his remarks. He reiterated a theory put forward by supporters such as Mike Lindell, the chairman of MyPillow, and Sidney Powell, the lawyer sued by voting machine companies for defamation for spreading conspiracy theories about the safety of their ballots.

President Biden’s victory, with more than 80 million votes, was confirmed by Congress after the January 6 riots were contained. There is no legal mechanism for reinstating a president, and efforts by Republicans in the Arizona Senate to re-count the votes in the largest district in the state have been ridiculed as false and clumsy by local Republican officials who say the result is partisan Circus eroding confidence in elections.

Nonetheless, Mr Trump has focused on efforts in Arizona and a lawsuit in Georgia to insist that not only is he back in office, but that Republicans will recapture a majority in the Senate through the same efforts, according to the trusted people with what he said.

He has urged conservative commentators and writers to reiterate his claims that the elections were rigged. His focus has intensified over the past few weeks, coinciding with the appointment of a special grand jury by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. to his business.

Frustrated by the lack of coverage, he has expressed his anger in press releases in which he is still referred to as “45. President of the United States ”.

“The next time I’m at the White House, there will be no more dinner with Mark Zuckerberg and his wife at his request,” he said in a statement Friday after Facebook announced that it would uphold its ban on him for at least two years. “It will all be business!”

Last week he closed his blog after hearing from friends that the site had low traffic and made him seem small and irrelevant, such a person familiar with his mindset.

Some of his aides are unwilling to delve into his conspiracy theories with him and would love to see him put forward a forward-looking agenda that could help Republicans in 2022. People around him joke that the senior advisor to the former free world leader is Christina Bobb, correspondent for the far-right, forever pro-Trump One America News Network, whom he consults regularly for information on Arizona election testing.

It remains to be seen what he will say when he appears in North Carolina for the 2020 election.

Mr Trump was keen to take the microphone back on Saturday night in Greenville, where aides said he planned to see Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the country’s top infectious disease expert, and the Biden government.

“Joe Biden wants the American taxpayers to pay reparations,” Trump is said to have said, according to an advisor who helped draft the speech. “I want the Chinese to pay reparations to American taxpayers.”

The first rally after Mr Trump’s presidency is slated for later in June, followed by more appearances both for himself, paid for by his super-PAC, and on behalf of the House Republicans who support his agenda, advisors said.

He was so eager for an audience that he’s even billed as a speaker who will perform live via Jumbotron at a rally in New Richmond, Wisconsin, where the other headliners are Diamond and Silk, the social media stars of the MAGA movement. and Dinesh D’Souza, who has received a presidential pardon from Mr. Trump for a criminal conviction for illegal campaign contributions.

Despite the humble nature of some of the events he would like to associate his name with, even some of his greatest critics refuse to write him off.

“I wish I was more confident it was ridiculous,” said Bill Kristol, a prominent “Never Trump” conservative. “The forest through the trees is missing so as not to see how strong it is.”

His two 2020 campaign managers, Bill Stepien and Brad Parscale, are on Mr Trump’s payroll and are still involved in his world. But Mr. Trump is episodically angry at most of his team.

This time, Jared Kushner, his son-in-law, who oversaw his 2020 campaign campaign, has largely stepped out and told the small group of advisors around the ex-president that he would like to focus on writing his book and building an easier relationship with Mr. Trump, where he is is just a son-in-law. Donald Trump Jr. is the most politically engaged family member in his father’s life.

Susie Wiles, the veteran Florida political advisor who credits the former president and everyone around him with winning the Critical State in 2016 and again in 2020, oversees Mr Trump’s Florida fundraiser and leads the skeleton team’s weekly conference call post-presidential operation is still ongoing.

That evening, Mr. Trump took part in fundraising drives on his golf course in Bedminster, NJ, for both his own political action committee and Republican candidates.

But he was eager to hold rallies again and announce states he wanted to travel to before his team had fixed any venues or dates.

“When you’re a one-term president, you usually go quietly into the night,” said Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian. “He sees himself as the leader of the revolution, and he does it from the back of a golf cart.”

Annie Karni reported from Washington and Maggie Haberman from New York.