Trump says goodbye During his final appearance on the 2024 campaign road, former President Donald Trump said goodbye to his signature rallies at an early-morning rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
“Your assistance means more than you can comprehend. Is it not unbelievable that this is my final rally? During an early-morning event on Tuesday at Grand Rapids, Michigan’s Van Andel Arena, Trump told fans, “The rallies, these big beautiful rallies, there is never been anything like it and there never will be.”
The remarks follow a busy day for Trump, who made trips in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Michigan to conclude his 2024 campaign.
Trump’s final appeal to return to the White House was delivered to supporters at his final event on election day, and the former president did not take the stage in Grand Rapids until after midnight on Tuesday.
After concluding his previous races at Grand Rapids’ DeVos Place in 2016 and the city’s airport in 2020, Trump’s ceremony in Grand Rapids marked the third time the former president has ended his campaign in the West Michigan city.
The occasion also demonstrated how important Michigan, a swing state where both camps had doubled the number of events and visits in 2016 and 2020, would be to his White House campaign.
Trump lost the state to President Biden in another close contest in 2020 after narrowly defeating former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2016. Joining Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin as crucial battlegrounds in this year’s election, Michigan is expected to have a similar impact on the outcome in 2024.
At points during the Grand Rapids rally, Trump, who has stated that this will be his final campaign, even if he loses to Vice President Kamala Harris, expressed gratitude to Michigan fans who have backed him during his three presidential attempts.
Trump remarked, “You are really incredible people.” “Now it’s nine years and we’ve been fighting side-by-side every step of the way we’ve been together.”
Also Read:
Harris Trump battle First ballots are cast in a small New Hampshire township at midnight.