Trump loyalists proud to support ‘felon’ at Las Vegas rally

Republican presidential candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump dances upon arrival at his campaign rally at Sunset Park on June 09, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The former president continues campaigning around the country amidst ongoing legal troubles. Trump is scheduled to sit for a probation interview via video on June 10 related to the felony conviction in his New York hush money case.

Republican presidential candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump dances upon arrival at his campaign rally at Sunset Park on June 09, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The former president continues campaigning around the country amidst ongoing legal troubles. Trump is scheduled to sit for a probation interview via video on June 10 related to the felony conviction in his New York hush money case. (Getty Images via AFP)

LAS VEGAS – Thousands of Donald Trump supporters rallied in baking heat Sunday to cheer on the Republican presidential candidate in Nevada, a key battleground state for the US election in November.
“It’s not too hot out here, right?” the 77-year-old told a cheering crowd in Las Vegas.
“If you start going down, we have people. They’ll pick you up right away. They’ll throw water.”
The gathering in Sunset Park was Trump’s first major rally since he was found guilty late last month of falsifying business records to hide a hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels shortly before the 2016 presidential election.
But for his most loyal followers, the verdict only strengthened Trump’s position against his Democratic rival, President Joe Biden.
“I don’t care about what happened to him in the trial… it doesn’t change my mind about him at all,” Lindsay Elliott, who came to the Trump event with her family, told AFP.
“I think it’s going to help him. I think that the American people are done with this crap,” the 40-year-old added.
Her daughter Mackenzie, 19, agreed: “It sucks what happened but I think it’s just going to make him stronger and make voters more encouraged to vote (for him).”
Trump, who faces three other criminal cases which are unlikely to be heard before the November election, spoke for just under an hour and attacked Biden as “the worst president in the history of our country.”
The Republican repeated conspiracy theories that the 2020 election was “stolen” by Democrats — despite exhaustive investigations finding no such evidence, and him being charged in relation to his alleged attempts to overturn the ballot result.
Trump also spoke ominously of the consequences if he is not elected in November, telling supporters: “If it doesn’t happen, you’re headed to World War III.”

‘Convicted felon’

Trump has been on a political swing through the American West that saw him hold a  fundraiser in California and attend a campaign town hall event in Arizona.
By 10:00 am (1700 GMT) Sunday in Las Vegas, as the thermometer already read 93 degrees Fahrenheit (34 Celsius), people wearing the traditional red of the Republican Party were queueing to hear Trump speak at midday, when the mercury soared to triple digits.
Vendors sold t-shirts reading “I’m voting for the convicted felon” — alluding to Trump’s verdict — along the mile-long line.
Near the end of the rally, at least one person overcome by the heat was seen being attended to by paramedics.
Trump’s Las Vegas event was a first for Shay Chan, 25, who found himself motivated by the New York court ruling.
“It’s very disheartening to see America is turning in this direction,” Chan told AFP. “If it can happen to Trump, it can happen to anyone else, right?”
Others came to show their support even if they could not vote, such as Karen Hall — a Chilean who lives in the United States but is not a citizen. She said illegal migration is an important issue for her.
“I’m an immigrant and I had to wait years to get my visa and arrive legally, and it bothers me that so many immigrants arrive illegally and pass through like it’s nothing. That bothers me a lot, that’s why I support president Trump,” she said.
Beth Matthews, wearing a Trump t-shirt, said she was only buoyed by his criminal conviction.
“I contributed right away to the campaign as soon as they came out” with the verdict, she said.

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