Election 2024: Trump holds first outdoor rally since assassination

Election 2024: Trump holds first outdoor rally since assassination

ASHEBORO, NC (AP) — At his first outdoor rally since the assassination attempt last month, Donald Trump spoke behind bulletproof glass at an event on national security in North Carolina on Wednesday. On political issues, he called his predecessor Barack Obama “evil” because of his comments the night before at the Democratic Party Convention.

Trump accused the president Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris for the deadly withdrawal from Afghanistan and for the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, while repeatedly returning to this idea in his speeches at the Democratic convention in Chicago and repeatedly describing Trump as a threat to the country should he return to the White House.

The former president and current Republican candidate asked the crowd gathered at the North Carolina Aviation Museum & Hall of Fame if they had seen the speeches given by former President Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama on Tuesday.

“He was referring to your president. And Michelle, too. You know, they always say, ‘Sir, please stick to the policy. Don’t get personal.’ And yet these people keep getting personal all evening long,” he said, asking, “Do I still have to stick to the policy?”

Trump, who will face Harris in the November election after Biden’s resignation, spoke from behind a podium surrounded by bulletproof glass panels that formed a protective wall above the stage – part of the increased security measures that protected him after the attack by a shooter from Pennsylvania on July 13.

Storage containers were stacked around the perimeter walls to create additional walls and block views. Snipers were stationed on the venue’s rooftops, old airplanes were parked behind the podium, and a large American flag hung from cranes.

The event, which focused on national security issues, was part of Trump’s week-long series of counter-programs to the Democratic National Conventionwhich is currently taking place in Chicago. have urged him to focus on policy rather than launching personal attacks against Harris while grappling with Biden’s exit from the race.

The second night of the Democratic National Convention on Tuesday was a sophisticated affair, with both Obama and went after Trump in particularly biting words.

“His limited and narrow view of the world led him to feel threatened by the existence of two hard-working, highly educated and successful people who happen to be black,” Michelle Obama said.

Barack Obama mocked Trump’s obsession with crowd sizes, calling Trump “a 78-year-old billionaire who hasn’t stopped whining about his problems since he rode down his golden escalator nine years ago.”

“There has been a constant stream of complaints and lawsuits, which has gotten even worse since he is afraid of losing to Kamala,” the former president said.

After mentioning the Obamas early in his speech, Trump returned to the former president’s remarks.

“He was very mean last night,” Trump said. “I try to be nice to people, you know. But when they get personal, it’s a little harsh.”

He then asked the crowd whether he should listen to his advisers, who he said had told him: “Please, sir, don’t get personal. Talk about politics.”

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“Should I get personal or should I not get personal?” he asked. The crowd overwhelmingly chose the former.

Trump also mocked the convention and the frequent references to him, calling it a “farce.”

In his remarks, Trump derided Harris as “the most radical leftist to ever run for high political office in our country” and said the woman he now calls “Comrade Kamala” would destroy the country if elected to the White House.

While Trump acknowledges that the race is more exciting than it was before Biden’s withdrawal, his advisers are convinced that Harris is still relatively unknown and that efforts to highlight her past statements and positions in previous elections will deter swing voters after her honeymoon phase is over.

He repeatedly referred to the Biden administration’s withdrawal from Afghanistan and announced that if he won the election, he would demand the resignation of all high-ranking military officials involved.

He promised to “ban critical race theory and transgender madness from our U.S. armed forces.” During his tenure, he introduced a Pentagon policy that Transgender people largely excluded from military servicewhich Biden reversed.

“Our warriors should be focused on defeating America’s enemies, not on figuring out their gender,” he said. “If you want a gender reassignment surgery or a social justice seminar, you can do that somewhere else, but not in the Army, Navy, Coast Guard, Air Force, Space Force or the United States Marines.”

He also promised major investments in the armed forces and announced the largest peacetime recruitment campaign in the country’s history.

“We’re going to make it so hot that I’ll want to quit and join the military,” said Trump, who received a series of deferments, including one with a doctor’s note stating that he was suffering from bone spurs in his feet.

Trump was endorsed on Wednesday by his running mate, Senator JD Vance of Ohio, who portrayed Harris as a candidate chosen by those in power rather than voters and sharply criticized her choice as vice president. Governor of Minnesota, Tim Walzbefore Trump took the stage.

This also included continuing to accuse Walz of false representation of his service certificate as a member of the Army National Guard and criticized him for leaving the service before his unit was deployed to Iraq.

“What is Tim Walz not lying about on Stolen Valor?” Vance, who served as a Marine for four years, asked the crowd.

Trump has spent this week visiting politically contested states, his busiest campaign week since the Republican primaries.

Given North Carolina’s importance in this year’s election, this was Trump’s second visit to the state in the past week. Last Wednesday, he appeared in Asheville, North Carolina, for a Speech on the economy.

Trump won North Carolina by a comfortable margin in 2016. The state gave the former president his narrowest nationwide victory four years ago and is also considered a decisive battleground in 2024.

Before Trump landed in Asheboro, his plane flew over the venue. The crowd erupted in cheers.

Edna Ryan, a 68-year-old retired flight attendant and private pilot, expressed optimism about the Republicans’ chances, but added: “We have to be strong, otherwise we will regret it very much.”

Lisa Watts, a retired business owner from Hickory, North Carolina, who attended her fifth Trump rally, said she was “very positive” about the campaign against Harris.

“I don’t think her record shows she’s ready to govern this country,” Watts said.

Watts said she did not believe Trump’s chances of winning today would be significantly different from those at the time when Biden was the Democratic nominee.

“I think the Democrats will try everything to keep her on that pedestal,” she said, predicting that the hype surrounding Harris will die down.

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Colvin reported from New York.

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