Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump celebrates victory

President-elect thanks state in West Allis stop

- MARY SPICUZZA MEG JONES

West Allis — President-elect Donald Trump’s Tuesday night “thank you” tour stop in Wisconsin often sounded a lot like an extended victory lap.

“I’m here today for one main reason,” Trump told the crowd at the packed Wisconsin State Fair Exposition Center. “To say ‘thank you’ to the people of Wisconsin.”

During his nearly hourlong speech, Trump repeatedly marveled at his surprise win. He ticked off a list of states that were reported to be in play, detailing the shock as he was called a winner in each of them.

“That map was bleeding red!” Trump said.

He also repeatedly mocked the media, calling reporters “very dishonest people” and saying news organizati­ons were “devastated” when he won on election night.

His speech was met with occasional chants of “Media sucks!” and “CNN sucks!” Some in the crowd shouted, “Liars!” when he complained that news coverage was biased against him.

But on Tuesday night, Trump had nothing but praise for Wisconsin Republican­s. Many of the state’s GOP leaders joined him at the rally, including Sen. Ron Johnson, Reince Priebus, U.S. Rep. Sean Duffy, Gov. Scott Walker, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald.

Trump and Ryan had a strained relationsh­ip throughout the election, but in West Allis the president-elect said he has come to appreciate Ryan’s genius “like a fine wine.”

But he also added that he won’t praise Ryan anymore if he goes against him.

During the presidenti­al primary, Trump had mocked Walker, saying he was the one who drove him out of the 2016 presidenti­al race and “sent him packing like a little boy.”

On Tuesday, he praised Walker’s toughness and leadership.

“I give a lot of credit to your governor,” he later added. “I give a lot of credit to Paul Ryan.”

During his speech, Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. mocked reports of Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election, calling it “the Russian conspiracy,” and said the United States intelligen­ce should instead investigat­e George Soros and liberal threats against conservati­ves.

Duffy struck a similar tone, accusing Democrats — whom he called “whiny sore losers” — of trying to diminish Trump’s victory.

People lined up in the bitter cold for hours before Trump’s rally. Many came from Illinois, deciding to drive up to Wisconsin because Trump was not stopping in their state — which he lost.

Peggy Geldenreic­h drove from

northern Illinois with her husband and son.

“We know he’s not going to come to Illinois, but a friend told us he was coming to West Allis,” she said. “I like his message and I think he wants to put us back on the right track.”

The first people in line outside the Exposition Center at State Fair Park were a couple from Nebraska who drove 13 hours to Trump’s rally, arriving at 3:30 a.m. and spending the next 12 1⁄2 hours in bitterly cold weather.

Trump’s visit came one day after Wisconsin elections officials completed a recount requested by Green Party candidate Jill Stein. The recount confirmed Trump won the state by some 22,000 votes.

He mocked the recount during his speech, saying he was not going to call it “a scam.”

Trump — the first Republican presidenti­al candidate to win Wisconsin since 1984, when the state backed Ronald Reagan — has been traveling around the country holding rallies on a “thank you” tour. Other stops include Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Florida and Alabama.

At a merchandis­e table filled with sweatshirt­s, T-shirts and “Make America Great Again” hats, lines stretched a dozen people deep. Kristi Kuehn of Black Earth bought two hats and a sweatshirt.

“I’m really excited. I hope the Democrats let us enjoy it,” said Kuehn. “This is the most excited people have been in a while.”

That seems unlikely. While Wisconsin’s top Republican­s have united around Trump, the state’s Democrats welcomed the president-elect with sharp criticisms of his dismissive response to reports of Russian interferen­ce in the election as well as his cabinet picks.

“He needs to spend less time at Trump Tower and more time with U.S. intelligen­ce profession­als going over his daily intelligen­ce briefing,” U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore, a Milwaukee Democrat, said in a statement. “Ignoring these briefings is a disservice to the American people, even if he does not necessaril­y like what he hears.”

As the rally was set to begin, Patti Bellissimo sat on her coat on the floor of the Expo Center reading a paperback, “The Gods of Newport,” to pass the time.

A pediatrici­an from the Madison area, Bellissimo, who is Catholic and against abortion, said she was happy to see Trump elected because of Supreme Court nomination­s in the next four years.

“I don’t think President Obama was friendly to health care,” said Bellissimo. “People don’t value health care as much as they used to. Trump may bring more of a business model.”

It was the fourth Trump rally for Dan Zielinski, 21, a University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee student, his brother Jordan and friend Grant Kosanke, both 17. The three volunteere­d for Trump in Menomonee Falls and got to meet him on the day of the Wisconsin primary, posing for pictures with the president-elect.

“I like the way he carries himself. I like that he’s not a politician,” said Dan Zielinski, who voted in his first presidenti­al election last month. “He brings a viewpoint that politician­s don’t have.”

 ?? RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence accept Packers jerseys from Gov. Scott Walker and House Speaker Paul Ryan (not pictured) after Trump spoke Tuesday at the State Fair Park Exposition Center. More photos at...
RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence accept Packers jerseys from Gov. Scott Walker and House Speaker Paul Ryan (not pictured) after Trump spoke Tuesday at the State Fair Park Exposition Center. More photos at...
 ?? RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? A group of about 15 to 20 protesters shout “Dump Trump” while marching Tuesday night near S. 84 St. and W. Greenfield Ave. before President-elect Donald Trump speaks to supporters nearby at the State Fair Park Exposition Center.
RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL A group of about 15 to 20 protesters shout “Dump Trump” while marching Tuesday night near S. 84 St. and W. Greenfield Ave. before President-elect Donald Trump speaks to supporters nearby at the State Fair Park Exposition Center.

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