Crowds were massing on streets and sidewalks around Madison Square Garden on Sunday morning eight hours before Donald Trump’s campaign rally starts at the famed venue.
Trump is set to take the stage at 5 p.m. but roads were already closed around the New York City stadium early in the day and security was in place, local outlets reported.
Before 8 a.m. huge crowds of supporters of all ages bearing American flags and Trump merch could already be seen in the cold morning air just waiting for for the countdown to Trump’s big moment in the heart of the city.
Trump will be accompanied by a host of high-profile speakers at the event including his running mate Sen. JD Vance, Rudy Giuliani, former presidential hopeful Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and his kids.
“Madison Square Garden is the center of the universe,” said Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller, noting the venue’s storied history hosting events including the 1971 “Fight of the Century.”
Plenty of those gathered Sunday morning were happy to agree with that sentiment.
“He’s not just going to be speaking to the attendees inside Madison Square Garden. There will be people tuning in from battleground states all across the country,” said former U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, a New York Republican and ally of the former president, who said Trump has been talking about holding an event at the venue since the start of his campaign, AP reports.
Trump will be joined at the rally by supporters including Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who has spent tens of millions of dollars to boost his campaign.
More to come…
Donald Trump’s rally draws apparent sellout crowd to Madison Square Garden
NEW YORK — Thousands of people from around the New York area and other parts of the country descended on Madison Square Garden in New York City on Sunday afternoon for former President Donald Trump’s campaign rally.
The NYPD said it had drones over the area, robots, and a helicopter, as well as antiterrorism units outside monitoring the situation to keep everyone safe.
With just nine days to go until Election Day, a new CBS News poll has the two presidential candidates neck and neck, with Vice President Kamala Harris at 50% and Trump at 49% among likely voters. In battleground states, both are polling at 50%.
The focus of the respective campaigns has been on issues including immigration, the war between Israel and Hamas, and crime.
Trump, JD Vance, Elon Musk and Melania Trump spoke
Sunday’s rally marked a detour from the battleground states for Trump. When Trump entered the arena there was applause, a standing ovation, and the crowd started chanting. Every seat appeared to be filled, from the floor to the highest sections.
In his remarks, Trump framed Vice President Kamala Harris as a “trainwreck” and said electing her would “gamble with the lives of millions.”
His speech included familiar campaign lines about immigration, his deportation plans, crime, the border, and the economy.
“We will rapidly defeat inflation, and we will very simply make America affordable again,” Trump said.
“And you know who I want to thank? [New York City] Mayor [Eric] Adams, because Mayor Adams has been treated pretty badly. You know, when he said this whole thing with the migrants coming into New York, this is just not sustainable. I said, well, he’s going to be indicted by these lunatics. A year later, he got indicted,” Trump said.
He also played a video montage that included stories about migrants in gangs allegedly committing violent crimes across the country.
“It’s called trend de agua, but now they’ve even taken over Times Square. On day one, I will launch the largest deportation program in American history to get the criminals out.”
Among those who took the stage before the former president spoke were vice presidential nominee JD Vance and billionaire supporter Elon Musk.
In a surprise, Melania Trump also made an appearance and introduced her husband. It was her first public political speech of this campaign cycle and the first time she has introduced her husband at an event this cycle. Mrs. Trump has largely stayed away from campaigning this year, appearing with her husband only a handful of times throughout Trump’s third presidential run.
Other speakers included Robert F. Kennedy Jr., former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, TV personality Dr. Phil McGraw, House Speaker Mike Johnson, Trump’s sons, Eric and Donald Jr., wrestler Hulk Hogan, and Staten Island activist Scott LoBaido.
“President Trump grew up here. He’s a New Yorker,” Giuliani said. “That’s why people get a little bit annoyed at him. He speaks his mind.”
Trump supporters revel in former president’s appearance
The former president is from Queens. CBS News New York met supporters from his home borough, as well as a couple from Chicago and others from around the New York area.
“I just love him, and he’s the best. I want the economy to get better,” a woman said.
“We have an influx of migrants, illegal migrants. Our economy is … just go to the grocery store,” a man from Dutchess County added.
“He presents everything that I desire to see happen in our country and in New York,” Queens resident Yvonne Coste said.
“Common sense America is what we need. Donald Trump can bring that to us like you did four years ago,” another person said.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman was one of several Long Island representatives who came to the Garden in the Trump motorcade.
New York has not voted for a Republican for president in 40 years, but GOP delegates said they hope Sunday’s rally helps change that.
“Just look around. This is incredible. We’re in New York City in the middle of, you know, this is liberal … one of the most liberal cities in the country, and it’s amazing,” New York City Councilwoman Inna Vernikov said.
“There’s no better place to show the contracts, positions, proposals that will secure our border,” Staten Island Rep. Nicole Malliotakis said.
Vulgar language during the introductions
Before Trump took the stage, there was some vulgar language in the speeches. Comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who goes by Kill Tony, referred made a crude joke referring to Puerto Rico as a “floating island of garbage” and made other offensive jokes about Black people and Latinos.
Trump senior advisor Danielle Alvarez told CBS News regarding to Puerto Rico comment, “This joke does not reflect the views of President Trump or the campaign,” and the campaign said the jokes were not reviewed or pre-approved.
Sid Rosenberg, a radio host Trump often talks to, called Hillary Clinton a “sick son of a b***,” and referred to migrants as “f***ing illegals.”
David Rem, a childhood friend of Trump’s, called Harris “the antichrist.”
Grant Cardone, a business owner, said Harris “and her pimp handlers will destroy the country.”
Mayor Adams later took to X, formerly known as Twitter, and denounced the vulgar language.
“The hateful words that were used by some at today’s rally at Madison Square Garden were completely unacceptable. No matter who says it, hate is hate and there is no place for it in our city. As Americans, we always should stand up against racism, antisemitism, and misogyny. Yesterday, ahead of today’s rally, I talked about how we all need to turn down the temperature that fuels hate and violence. I am once again renewing those calls,” Adams said.
Kamala Harris widens lead over Donald Trump in New York. Here’s what pundits say the new poll could mean for the House race.
NEW YORK — According to a new poll, Kamala Harris has widened her lead over former President Donald Trump in New York, and it attributes the jump to the vice president picking up steam in the suburbs and upstate.
The latest Siena College poll on Long Island has Harris leading by 19 percentage points — 58-39, with a margin of error of 4.2.
CBS News New York’s Marcia Kramer spoke to a political expert on Tuesday about what it could mean for other key races in the state.
Here’s what else the Siena College poll says
New York might not be a battleground state in the presidential election, but it sure will play a key roll in determining which party controls the House of Representatives, and it seems that Harris’ popularity here is helping in the battle to flip five Republican seats into the blue column.
“New York historically has been a lynchpin for who controls Congress,” political consultant O’Brien Murray said.
Gov. Kathy Hochul has opened 65 offices around the state in a campaign attempting to unseat the five freshman Republicans who won in 2022.
And she got some good news in the new Siena College poll.
Democrat Laura Gillen, the former Hempstead town supervisor has opened up a 12-point lead over Rep. Anthony D’Esposito in the 4th Congressional District in Nassau County. The poll has Gillen at 53 and D’Esposito at 41, with a margin of error of 4.4.
In Suffolk County’s 1st Congressional District, former CNN anchor John Avlon is breathing down the neck of Rep. Nick Lalota. The poll has Lalota at 47 and Avlon at 44, with a margin of error of 4.5.
Democratic optimism ramps up
The new poll is good news for House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who is hoping to become the first Black speaker of the House if he can flip just four seats.
“If you were Hakeem Jeffries and you see these two polls, are you optimistic?” Kramer asked Murray.
“I’m optimistic, and I’m going to see what surrogates I can give those campaigns. I’m going to give them all the support I can,” Murray replied.
Experts say the Harris statewide lead could help the Democrats flip Republican seats in the Hudson Valley and Syracuse.
“Absolutely. I mean, if Harris is up by 19 and she stays that way, that makes all the difference,” Murray said.