The Niagara Falls Review

How Plaid Shirt Guy got into Trump rally

Tyler Linfesty, 17, stole the show with his honest reactions

- SARAH MERVOSH New York Times News Service

At a rally in Montana last week, the crowd cheered for President Donald Trump as he gave a freewheeli­ng speech that touched on the economy, his 2016 victory over Hillary Clinton and his success as “your favourite of all time president.”

Online, the cheers were for a teenager in a plaid shirt.

The teenager, who was standing behind the president in the camera’s view, could be seen raising his eyebrows, grimacing and shaking his head throughout much of the event, in Billings, Montana. At one point, he widened his eyes and mouthed a word of confusion: “What?”

Eventually, a woman approached him, gestured for his exit and replaced him.

He gained widespread attention and on social media came to be known as Plaid Shirt Guy.

As his online persona took off, so did the questions: Who was he? What was he doing there? And how did he, of all people, manage to get such prime seating?

Who is Plaid Shirt Guy?

Internet, meet Tyler Linfesty. He’s a 17-year-old high school senior at Billings West High School. Though he identifies as a social democrat, he said he didn’t want to miss the chance to see a speech by the president of the United States. So he and some friends signed up to attend Trump’s rally Thursday.

That morning, Linfesty said, he got an email saying that he had been selected for VIP status, which meant that he would get to meet the president and have access to premier seating. He said that he did not apply for the status and that he believed he was chosen by chance.

He got to take a brief picture with the president before the rally and asked organizers whether he and his friends could sit together behind the stage. In fact, their seats could not have been more prominent.

“I think it was basically random that we got placed right behind him and on television,” Linfesty said Saturday.

Linfesty said organizers instructed the crowd to clap and cheer, but he said he could not bring himself to applaud for things that he did not agree with. He said he did not know he was so visible until friends texted him in the middle of the speech.

“That was not me trying to protest,” Linfesty said. “That was just my honest reactions to the things that he was saying.”

At one point during the speech, he put on a pin showing support for the Democratic Socialists of America. Finally, a woman slid into the aisle and whispered something to him. He walked off and she replaced him in the crowd: a new face, now smiling pleasantly in the background.

Shortly afterward, his friends were replaced, too.

Backstage, Linfesty said he was pulled aside while police officers and Secret Service officials checked his identifica­tion. After about 10 minutes, he said, “they respectful­ly told me to just leave and not come back.”

How to sit up front at a Trump rally

Trump’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment about Linfesty’s removal.

In general, not anyone can stand behind political candidates at rallies, campaign experts said. That area is tightly controlled and often reserved for notable people, local politician­s and campaign volunteers. Sometimes, campaigns may invite community members to convey a sense of local authentici­ty.

“The question is, What is it you want to have people think when they look at the picture?” said Jennifer Cunningham of SKDKnicker­bocker, a political consulting firm that has worked on presidenti­al campaigns.

Most people don’t need encouragem­ent to behave appropriat­ely, but to prevent slip-ups, campaigns typically vet people who will be near the president and instruct them on how to avoid being a distractio­n, experts said.

“For a presidenti­al campaign to fail to do even a cursory vetting — the guy was wearing a Democratic Socialists of America sticker, for heaven’s sake — is unpreceden­ted,” said Cunningham, whose firm works with Democratic campaigns. “The rule is that you vet everything and everyone so there are no surprises.”

 ?? DOUG MILLS NYT ?? Tyler Linfesty, who became known as Plaid Shirt Guy, looking incredulou­s behind U.S. President Donald Trump in Billings, Mont. last week during the president’s speech, gained widespread attention.
DOUG MILLS NYT Tyler Linfesty, who became known as Plaid Shirt Guy, looking incredulou­s behind U.S. President Donald Trump in Billings, Mont. last week during the president’s speech, gained widespread attention.

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