Trump Madison Square Garden rally live updates: MAGA crowd fills 20,000-capacity arena

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Donald Trump is preparing to speak to a packed crowd at Madison Square Garden with nine days left of the presidential election campaign.

The former president will take the stage in deep blue New York City, where he grew up and made his name as a real estate mogul and TV star on The Apprentice.

The doors open at 12pm Eastern Time and the program of speakers including Elon Musk, J.D. Vance, Donald Trump Jr. and Tucker Carlson will begin at 5pm. 

MAGA fans lined up in their thousands overnight to listen to the Republican nominee make his final pitch to voters in what could be one of the closest elections in decades.

Meanwhile Kamala Harris is campaigning in Pennsylvania, the state that could ultimately decide who takes the keys to the White House. The election is still a dead heat, with Harris and Trump deadlocked in the polls nationwide. 

Follow all the action below. 

 

Trump fans demand to know why there were no toilets on Madison Square Garden line

Donald Trump’s loyal fans asked why there weren’t ‘porta potties’ outside Madison Square Garden, where some were camped out overnight waiting for the Sunday rally.

Many complained they were forced to pee in bottles because no toilets were available.

‘We’re peeing in bags and little cups, and we had to put up a little portable privacy shower so people didn’t have to look at each other when they did that,’ one frustrated fan told the New York Post.

Dorothea Ohlandt, 59, told the outlet that she had arrived on Friday night from North Carolina.

She said that New York City was the only place not to provide basic facilities, having experienced rallies across the country.

Trump leaves for Madison Square Garden

Donald Trump has left Trump Tower in Manhattan to make his way to Madison Square Garden.

His deputy communications director Margo Martin posted a video of the former president walking through revolving doors to his motorcade.

His sons Eric and Donald Trump Jr. followed behind him onto the sidewalk under a white screen.

Trump campaign senior advisor Dan Scavino slams Hillary Clinton for comparing MSG event to Nazi rally

Donald Trump’s senior advisor Dan Scavino joined the sea of criticism against Hillary Clinton for claiming the former president wanted to reenact the Nazi rally in 1939.

‘Hey Hillary Clinton…she had some not-so-nice things to say about this rally at Madison Square Garden…Take a look, Hillary! USA!,’ he said.

Doug Emhoff says Donald Trump is ‘falling apart’

By Emily Goodin, senior White House correspondent

Doug Emhoff said Donald Trump is ‘falling apart.’

‘The other side is just trying to put all this noise and gaslighting and misinformation,’ he said during a campaign stop in Atlanta.

He then turned his fire on Trump: ‘Just look at him. He’s falling apart. …. Just listen to what he is saying.’

Emhoff also blamed Trump for the ‘chilling of free speech’ as large news outlets – including the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times – decide not to endorse a presidential candidate.

‘People in the media [are] afraid to do something because there is a chilling effect,’ he said. ‘We cannot live like that.’

Harris rally gets interrupted

By Emily Goodin, senior White House correspondent in Philadelphia

Kamala Harris held a short rally in Philadelphia where her 15-minute speech was interrupted by a medical emergency and a protester.

Shortly after she started talking, someone toward the back fainted. Harris paused to let medical professionals get to the person.

‘That’s what we do. We look out for each other,’ she said.

A few minutes later she was interrupted by a Gaza protester. The crowd responded in chats of: ‘We aren’t going back!;

Harris said she is committed to end this war and bring the hostages home – then she got back to her speech.

Trump’s childhood friend: Kamala Harris is the ‘anti-Christ’

Donald Trump’s childhood friend fired up the MAGA crowd at Madison Square Garden by calling Kamala Harris the ‘devil’ and the ‘anti-Christ’.

‘She is the devil … She is the anti-Christ. At her rally last week, she said that Jesus Christ’s followers are not welcomed at her rallies,’ he said waving a crucifix on stage.

His remarks referenced Harris’ event at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse in which Christian students protested against her abortion stance.

Harris insinuated they were at the ‘wrong rally’.

Protester escorted out of Harris rally

A protester with a Palestine flag is escorted out of Kamala Harris’ rally in Philadelphia:

Rudy Giuliani implies Democrats tried to kill Trump twice

Just days after he was asked to turn over his New York apartment in a lawsuit, Rudy Giuliani lavished praise on Donald Trump at his Madison Square Garden rally.

‘It’s kind of funny that they tried everything else, now they’re trying to kill him,’ he said in reference to the two assassination attempts.

‘Donald Trump gave us a world at peace,’ Giuliani later said and then accused Biden of giving the United States a ‘world war.

‘President Trump grew up here. He’s a New Yorker. That’s why some people get a little annoyed when he speaks his mind. But wouldn’t you however, have a president that communicates with you than one who sits in a basement’

Trump rally speaker calls Puerto Rico a ‘floating pile of garbage’ and jokes about African-Americans ‘carving watermelons’ and calls Democrats a ‘P. Diddy party’

‘Roast’ comedian Tony Hinchcliff joked about Latinos, African-Americans and Puerto Rico during his speech at Madison Square Garden.

‘Believe it or not, people, I welcome migrants to the United States of America with open arms. And by open arms, I mean like this,” he joked while mouthing, ‘No, go back.’

‘It’s wild. And these Latinos, they love making babies, too, just know that. They do, they do. There’s no pulling out. They don’t do that. They come inside, just like they did to our country.’

‘Republicans are the party with the good sense of humor. I don’t know if you guys know this, but there is literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. I think it’s called Puerto Rico?’

There were sparse laughs in the crowd, before a joke where he said the Democrats were ‘more like a P. Diddy party’.

Radio host: Hillary Clinton is a ‘sick son of a b****’

Radio host Sid Rosenberg unleashed an expletive-filled tirade during his appearance at Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally.

He called Hillary Clinton a ‘sick son of a b***’ and the Democratic Party as a ‘bunch of degenerates’.

Rosenberg ripped into the former Secretary of State for claiming Trump wanted to ‘recreate’ the infamous Nazi rally from 1939.

Then he slammed the ‘f***ing’ illegal immigrants and homeless in big cities.

He also claimed you couldn’t go out in New York City after 10pm because of the wave of crime.

She has some sick posture, that Hillary Clinton.

What a sick son of a bitch. That whole f***ing party a bunch of degenerates, lowlifes, Jew haters and low lives.

Every one of them. Every one of them. Look at my city. Look at my city. Yes. This building is beautiful. You’re all beautiful. Look at you.

But you can’t walk outside past about 10:00 at night here…You get punch across the face just for walking down the street. Who did that? Bill de Blasio. Eric Adams shitty Democrat. Mayors. Andrew Cuomo. Kathy Hochul. S****y Democrat governors.

You got homeless and veterans… Americans sleeping in their own feces on a bench in Central Park. But the f***ing illegals, they get whatever they want, don’t they?!

Five star hotels. Cash. Come and get Yankee-Dodger tickets tomorrow night. That’s all about the Democrat rule folks.

Whether it’s blue cities, blue states or a blue administration. There’s only one person alive today that can fix all of it. Look at all your signs. He can fix it.

Harris meets with grade-schoolers ahead of Philly speech

By Emily Goodin, senior White House correspondent in Philadelphia

Kamala Harris will soon address a crowd of about 3,000 supporters at a community center in Philadelphia.

Harris held a low-key day in Philadelphia – attending church and visiting a number of small businesses, including a bookstore, a barbershop and a restaurant – as she courts voters in the battleground state.

Ahead of her remarks to the larger audience, Harris stopped in a smaller gym to watch some young black grade-school age kids do some basketball dribbling and layup drills.

‘When I look at you, I know the future of our country is so bright,’ she told them.

Holocaust survivor Jerry Wartski attends Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally… despite Nazi comparisons

Trump lawyer Alina Habba wears shiny MAGA jacket and vows to ‘make liberals cry’

Donald Trump’s attorney Alina Habba took the stage at Madison Square Garden to huge cheers and promised to ‘herd the sheep’ out of the White House.

She walked onto the stage wearing a shiny jacket with MAGA emblazoned on the back the song ‘All I Do Is Win’.

‘They thought they could take the greatest president down through lawfare,’ the lawyer wearing a red dress said, referring to the criminal and civil cases against the former president.

‘They thought they could crush the man who built this city skyline.’

She then vowed to ‘make liberals cry’ and said Trump will tell Kamala Harris ‘you’re fired’ on election day.

‘This is the party of strength, resilience, and a voice that echoes around the world. Our voices can not be silenced and this movement will not be stopped.’

Tim Walz plays Madden on Twitch with AOC

It’s not all about Pennsylvania: How Trump and Harris can win WITHOUT the keystone state

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have set their sights on Pennsylvania as key to victory in the presidential election. But it is not their only path to the White House.

Last week, Harris visited the state twice with campaign events in Erie and Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania. Trump campaigned in Oaks, Pennsylvania, and Latrobe outside Pittsburgh.

Pennsylvania with its nineteen electoral votes is the biggest of the seven battleground states that could swing either way and decide the election.

And the latest polling is showing the race in a dead heat in the crucial swing state, with Trump up just half a point in the Real Clear Politics average.

While the path forward to the necessary 270 electoral votes becomes much more complicated without Pennsylvania, it does not mean the race is over for either Trump or Harris.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul: Trump’s rally is a ‘white flag of surrender’

New York’s Democratic governor Kathy Hochul suggested Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally on Sunday is a ‘white flag of surrender’.

‘I think he’s waving the white flag of surrender,’ Hochul said on Sunday.

He’s coming back to a city that he knows well. He’s comfortable here. Maybe he’d like to sleep in his own bed.”

Hochul said that while Trump is going to a ‘known, familiar’ environment, it won’t serve him on the campaign trail.

Especially, she said, while Kamala Harris is campaigning in the key swing state of Pennsylvania.

‘He’s giving up, because why else would you come to New York City? You are not going to find undecided voters walking the streets of Manhattan today.’

Tim Walz compares Trump Madison Square Garden campaign event to Nazi rally in 1939

Kamala Harris’ running mate Tim Walz became the latest Democrat to compare Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally to the Nazi party event at the same venue in 1939.

Speaking on the campaign trail in Nevada, he said:

Donald Trump’s got this big rally going at Madison Square Garden. There’s a direct parallel to a big rally that happened in the 1930s at Madison Square Garden

Hillary Clinton said last week that Trump is trying to ‘reenact’ the Nazi rally from 85 years ago.

She also called her 2016 rival a ‘fasicst’ after his former chief of staff John Kelly said he wanted his generals to be more like Adolf Hitler’s.

On Beberuary 20, 1939, 20,000 attended an event organized by the German American Bund, which was billed as a ‘pro-Americanism’ rally.

The stage featured a huge portrait of George Washington surrounded by swastikas.

Hundreds of thousands of anti-Nazi protesters gathered outside and clashed with police.

Where Donald Trump and Kamala Harris stand on 15 key issues in the 2024 election as the race heats up

In what is expected to be one of the closest elections in history, the candidates could not be further apart when it comes to the key issues.

Donald Trump and Kamala Harris have laid out two drastically different visions for America during the unprecedented 2024 campaign for the White House.

The rivals have both painted each other as extreme and warned their policies will be a disaster for U.S. voters.

It means that on November 5 there is a stark choice when it comes to the economy, foreign policy, immigration, crime, abortion and taxes.

Whether they will be able to implement their wish list depends on a number of factors, including which party controls Congress.

But their grand plans are a crucial indicator in what four years of a Trump or Harris administration would look like.

Trump calls for 10,000 more agents at the border

Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene fires up the Madison Square Garden crowd

Early voting continues in North Carolina

More than two million North Carolina residents have already voted in one of the key states in the battle for the White House.

It amounts to more than a quarter of eligible voters in the state.

Lines formed in Mecklenburg County as people continued to fill out their ballots over the weekend.

Across the country, the number of Americans who have cast their ballot has already broken records.

A sea of MAGA hats – big and small – at the Madison Square Garden rally

Exclusive:Don’t count out New York, Trump voter tells DailyMail.com

Michael Rydelek, 27, of Rockland County told DailyMail.com that New York is not unwinnable for Donald Trump in 2024.

“I think in 2016 people said there’s no way Donald Trump would ever win the United States, it’s never going to happen. New York is, in a lot of ways, a mirror culturally of what’s going on,” Rydelek said.

And just as crazy as the win in 2016 was, I think we’re looking at the same thing in 2024. You have a lot of people in New York City that are aware something needs to change and willing to go forth with that change. New York City’s a big part of that equation.

People say, ‘why is Trump at Madison Square Garden?’ Well he’s making a play for New York.

Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in New York City

Melissa Vitelli, 37, of Brooklyn predicted that the former president has a chance to take liberal New York in 2024.

Outside Madison Square Garden on Sunday, the healthcare worker told DailyMail.com:

I think it will be closer than ever [in New York]. If [Trump] doesn’t take it, it’s gonna be close.

Trump is speaking at the renowened Manhattan arena on Sunday evening.

Vitelli said New York isn’t out of play and reflected on the shifts she has seen toward the right in recent years in her Brooklyn neighborhood.

“I live in a Hasidic Jewish neighborhood, Borough Park – they have Trump flags up. They’re relatively known for voting Democrat. And it is, it has shifted,” Vitelli said.

There’s definitely more of a shift [this election from 2020]. I think the media had a lot to do with it. The more negative they are towards him, the more it wakes people up.

Like, okay, he’s being targeted. And we feel as citizens, like, if he could get targeted, so can we.

Vitelli already cast her ballot for Trump on Saturday as early voting kicked off in New York.

Harris said her first priority as president is to restore abortion rights

By Emily Goodin, senior White House correspondent in Philadelphia

Kamala Harris said her first priority as president would be to restore abortion right s across the country.

‘My first priority is to put back in place those protections and to stop this pain, and to stop this injustice that is happening around our country,’ she told CBS News.

CBS’s Norah O’Donnell asked her why she argues Donald Trump will put forward a national abortion band.

‘Just read Project 2025,’ Harris responded.

‘He said that’s not true,’ O’Donnell pointed out.

‘Come on,’ Harris replied. ‘Are we really taking his word for it? He said that women should be punished. He has been all over the place on this. But I’m too busy watching what he’s doing to see what he has said.’

Democrats see abortion rights as a winning issue. It was one that motivated their voting bloc in the midterm election. Michelle Obama emphasized the fight for reproductive rights in her first campaign appearance for Harris on Saturday.

Harris spends day campaigning in Philly

By Emily Goodin, senior White House correspondent in Philadelphia

Kamala Harris spent Sunday campaigning in Philadelphia, going to church, stopping at African American-themed bookstore, and sitting in the ‘lucky chair’ at a barber shop.

At the Philly Cuts in West Philly, Harris sat down in a chair that has been a good luck touchstone for political candidates. The barbers told her that every candidate running for elected office who has sat in the chair has won their election.

Pennsylvania could decide the presidential election with its 19 electoral votes.

Both campaigns are going all-in in the state.

Harris also visited a bookstore with books about Africa, civil rights icons, and slavery on the shelves.

She told people there: ‘I plan on putting on some pounds after this is over. They’re working me to the bone.’

Later Sunday night Harris will address a rally in West Philadelphia.

Kamala Harris and Gretchen Whitmer have a beer during Michigan campaign stop

Crowd starts to fill Madison Square Garden

Thousands who have waited for the doors at Madison Square Garden for Donald Trump’s rally have started filling into the arena.

Many camped out overnight to get a prime spot in the ‘World’s Most Famous Arena’.

Michelle Obama rips into men and calls Trump senile in extraordinary attack on Kamala Harris’ critics

by Sarah Ewall-Wice, Senior Political Reporter in Kalamazoo, Michigan

Former First Lady Michelle Obama hit the campaign trail for Kamala Harris for the first time on Saturday where she called for a ‘grown up in the White House’ and blasted Donald Trump for lies, childish antics and moral decline before making an emotional appeal directly to men.

Her appearance in Kalamazoo. Michigan comes as polls show the presidential race in a dead heat with just ten days to go before the election.

The former first lady questioned why Harris is being held to a higher standard and must prove she belongs.

‘But for Trump we expect nothing at all, no understanding of policy, no ability to put together a coherent argument, no honesty, no decency, no morals.’

She said too many people are willing to write off his ‘childish, mean-spirited antics.’

Obama accused the ex-president for ‘gross incompetence’ while people ask Harris to ‘dazzle’ at every turn.

‘I hope that you’ll forgive me if I’m a little angry that we are indifferent to his erratic behavior, his obvious mental decline, his history as a convicted felon, a known slumlord, a predator found liable for sexual abuse, all of this while we pick apart Kamala’s answers from interviews that he doesn’t even have the courage to do,’ she said.

Obama also said Harris ‘dominated her opponent so thoroughly in the debate he was too scared to face her again.’

When will we know who won the 2024 election?

The biggest election night 2024 mystery may not be whether Donald Trump or Kamala Harris gets the White House – but when Americans will find out who won.

With polls showing the race a virtual coin flip between Trump and Harris, the November 5 election looks to be perhaps the closest in history.

That will likely spell a long, drawn out round of mail-in ballot counts and even recounts depending on the state.

If any of the seven battlegrounds are close, counting could drag on well into November 6 and beyond.

The 2020 election was not called for Joe Biden until four days later – on the following Saturday.

On Election Day in 2000, Democrat Al Gore conceded in the wee hours the next morning, but then spectacularly rescinded his not-legally-binding concession.

J.D. Vance gets into tense back and forth with CNN’s Jake Tapper over Trump ‘enemy within’ comments

NBC election guru: It’s hard to ignore the trend towards Trump

NBC election guru Steve Kornacki said Sunday that it is ‘hard to ignore’ poll numbers showing Donald Trump gaining momentum with just over a week until the election.

On Meet The Press he said that recent surveys don’t show Trump pulling away, but the slim margins are bad news for the vice president.

The election is still shaping up to be one of the closest in history, but the tide seems to have turned to Trump in recent days.

Democrats in past elections have seen a bigger lead than Harris has in the build-up to election day.

Kornacki insisted the race will still be decided in the seven battleground states, but explained the nationwide trend.

One thing we have noticed in the last couple of days, this is not all of the polls that are out there now, but we have seen a number – four in the last four days – that have shown very small, but in the context of this close race, potentially meaningful movement in Trump’s direction. I don’t want to overstate it, but at the same time, it’s hard to ignore these four

The CNBC poll came out the other day – has Trump ahead by two. The Wall Street Journal poll – Trump ahead by three.

These are national numbers. CNN, The New York Times, A tied race, CNN, a tied race. The significance here is broader movement. Again, we’re seeing in Trump’s direction.

To put this into some context, here is our current national polling average. Harris continues to lead nationally.

We want to stress that. But we’ve been tracking this every week on the air here.

A couple of weeks ago, this number was at three for Kamala Harris. Her lead in the poll average now down to 1.2 because of some of the numbers that I just showed you.

Trump fans line up outside Madison Square Garden

Harris and Walz campaign to air ad during the Philadelphia Eagles game

Snipers stand on the roof of Madison Square Garden as MAGA fans line up for Trump rally

Trump and Harris early voters in Michigan reveal how they feel about the Hitler comparisons

As the campaign heads into the final stretch with less than ten days to go before Election Day, former President Donald Trump is facing fresh accusations he praised Adolf Hitler.

But with early voting already underway, his Republican supporters are rejecting the latest allegations.

More than 38 million people have voted in the election already.

Early in-person voting kicked off in Michigan on Saturday with a steady stream of Trump supporters showing up to cast their ballots for the ex-president.

They dismissed the reported Hitler praise as ‘hogwash’ and slammed Trump’s former White House chief of staff retired General John Kelly who shared his account of it.

How the weather could sway the election

In less than two weeks, Americans will decide whether Vice President Kamala Harris will be the first female president, or former President Trump will win a second term.

But experts say another factor will play a big role in this decision: the weather.

In the wake of hurricanes Helene and Milton, which ravaged the East Coast from Florida to Virginia, many voters are still in recovery mode and may not be able to get to the polls.

Helene’s devastating impact on swing state North Carolina could have an especially strong influence on the election, political strategist Bradley Trunk told DailyMail.com.

‘North Carolina is one of the seven states that will determine who the next president of the United States is going to be,’ he said. ‘You can’t really have much higher stakes than this.’

Elsewhere in the US, even your average rainstorm could have a significant influence on voter turnout and mood, Trunk said.

Research has shown that rainfall negatively impacts voter turnout. One study estimates that for every centimeter of rain that falls on voting day, turnout falls by 0.95 percentage points.

Kari Lake’s transformation from beloved TV anchor to Trump’s ‘killer’ in Arizona

by Rob Crilly, Chief Political Correspondent

For two decades Kari Lake’s throaty voice and pixie cut were fixtures on Fox 10 in Phoenix, providing the sort of comforting presence common on local news channels across the nation: Introducing cooking features moments after relaying details of grisly murders.

That all seems like a long time ago.

Now she is running for the Senate as a Trump loyalist who, like him, leveraged TV name recognition into a firebrand political career, rising to national prominence and infamy after refusing to accept election defeat.

‘She’s a killer,’ Trump told DailyMail.com aboard his plane last year when the 55-year-old was frequently floated as a potential running mate.

She has been afforded fundraisers at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Florida home, and some of MAGA world’s top insiders have worked on her run for Senate.

Pollster Frank Luntz reveals the exact moment he believes Kamala lost the election

Renowned pollster Frank Luntz revealed the exact moment Kamala Harris lost herself the election.

During a CNN interview Wednesday, Luntz, also known as ‘The Nostradamus of pollsters,’ said the Democratic nominee was doing well in the polls until she ‘froze’ after focusing her attention on Donald Trump.

‘She had the best 60 days of any presidential candidate in modern history,’ Luntz said.

‘And then the moment she turned anti-Trump and focused on him and said ‘don’t vote for me, vote against him.’ That’s when everything froze.’

Luntz added that Trump is ‘defined’ as he is ‘not gaining’ and ‘not losing’ in the election, while his opponent is ‘less well defined.’

What time does Trump’s rally begin?

The doors at Madison Square Garden opened for special guests and VIPs at 12pm Eastern Time and general admission began flooding the arena at 1pm.

Fans began lining up in Manhattan Saturday night and camped out for the historic event set to attract 20,000 MAGA fans – at least inside the arena.

Elon Musk, Donald Trump Jr. and former Fox News host Tucker Carlson are among the guests who will take the stage when the pre program begins around 3pm.

Trump will be the final act at the iconic arena, expected at 5pm but likely to kick off later after a lengthy pre show.

Tickets were handed out on a first-come, first-served basis.

The stage is set: Inside Madison Square Garden before Trump’s rally

Inside preparations for Trump’s blockbuster Madison Square Garden rally

Donald Trump is heading to New York City’s renowned Madison Square Garden to make his closing argument to Americans about why he should be back in the White House.

The sold out event will see roughly 20,000 MAGA fans come out just nine days before what could be the closest presidential election in history as Trump and Kamala Harris are virtually tied in every poll.

Trump choosing to hold one of his final rallies at Madison Square Garden is curious as Harris is polling a solid 14 points ahead of him in the state.

While New York is a solidly blue state, the Big Apple is still Trump’s original hometown and where the billionaire started his business empire several decades ago.

And he hopes to infuse momentum into several crucial down-ballot races in the state that Republicans need to hold onto if they want to keep their slim majority in the House of Representatives.

Former TV star Trump loves a show and MSG is bound to give him the spectacle he desires.

Diehard MAGA fans wait in line at Madison Square Garden before sunrise ahead of Trump’s big rally

Diehard MAGA fans were seen gathering outside Madison Square Garden just before sunrise ahead of Donald Trump’s big rally in New York City.

The sold out event will see roughly 20,000 Trump fans flock to the Big Apple – just nine days before what could be the closest presidential election in history as Trump and Kamala Harris are virtually tied in every poll.

Dozens of devoted Republicans were seen sporting red ‘Make America Great Again’ baseball hats as they lined up on the corner of 33rd and 6th Avenue of America early Sunday morning in predominantly-liberal New York City.

An array of Trump merch, including shirts, jackets, large billboards, and a trailer filled with flags – donning the Republican nominees’ face and name – surrounded the venue as the streets lit up in red, white and blue.

A heavy police presence also gathered as groups of NYPD officers were seen outside MSG accompanied by large police vehicles and multiple patrol cars.





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