South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Pence rallies in Central Florida, Trump to come Monday.

President Trump reschedule­s rally at airport forMonday

- By Steven Lemongello, and Cristóbal Reyes

Vice PresidentM­ikePence held two rallies in Central Florida on Saturday, paving theway for President Trump to campaign in the region onMonday.

“The road to victory runs through Florida,” Pence told the crowd of more than 300 at the outdoor rallyona hot, sunny afternoon. The Latinos for Trump event was at Central Christian University inwest Orlando.

Pence praised Trump for supporting Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido against the country’s socialist leader, Nicolas Maduro, and for reversing the openness measures the Obama administra­tion had begun with

Cuba’s government.

“In this White House, it will always be, Viva Cuba Libre!” Pence said.

Pence said the unemployme­nt rate for Hispanic Americans had been the lowest in history “in the first three years.”

“We made America great again,” Pence said. “Andthen the coronaviru­s struck fromChina.”

Without mentioning the current death toll of more than 210,000 Americans, Pence cited his work as the White House’s point man on the pandemic and Trump’s China travelbani­n January.

The vice president did touch on Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis, just minutes before Trump himself addressed supporters from the White House balcony in his first public event since leaving the hospitalMo­nday.

“I spoke to the president this morning before I came to Florida, and I can tell you, he and the First Lady are doing just great,” he said.

He also said to remember “all those that have been impacted by the coronaviru­s [and] families that have suffered loss.”

“Can we just take a moment to say thanks to the doctors, the nurses, the first responders and everyone who helped America through [the pandemic]?” he asked, leading to a standing ovation from the largely maskless crowd.

“And we’re opening up America again,” he said immediatel­y afterward.

By 1:30 p.m., hundreds of Trump supporters, many riding in golf carts, lined up outside a parking lot in Brownwood Paddock Square in The Villages, hours before Pence’s second stop on Saturday. Dozens more lined up outside the penned venue.

The goal of the rally was to win the support of seniors and veterans, voting blocs that appear to be in play ahead of the Nov. 3 election.

Bill Natalie, a resident of the Villages, said he has noticed more support for former Vice President Bill Biden around town in recent weeks, but he said he believes his community will continue to be a firmTrump stronghold.

“It’s depressing to see” Biden supporters starting to have a presence in the area, said Natalie, whoattende­d thePence rally wearing a “Villagers for Trump” T-shirt. “But when I see hangouts like this, it feels like that impression is a little misleading.”

Sheonna Hill, 42, came to the rally from Ormond Beach with her aunt. Both wore shirts that read “Socialism Distancing,” a design that Hill said she came up with.

Hill said she hasn’t voted in a presidenti­al election before and skipped out on voting in 2016 because “Trump was an arrogant [expletive] on TV, and I didn’t likeHillar­y.” But she plans on voting for Trump this year, partly to avoid what she thinks would be a socialist takeover should Biden become president.

“The only other president I wanted to vote for was [Ronald] Reagan, but I was too young,” Hill said. “Over the last four years, I’ve been very impressed by what I’ve seen from Trump, and we need to keep going with him.”

The Pence campaign swing comes a week after Trump’s planned rally at Orlando Sanford Internatio­nal Airport was called off due to the president’s positive coronaviru­s diagnosis. Trump has now reschedule­d that rally at the airport forMonday night.

On Saturday, attorney Daniel Uhlfelder, who gained notoriety during Florida’s pandemicwa­ve this summer by dressing as the Grim Reaper at beaches and other gatherings, filed a lawsuit in Seminole Circuit Court to try to stop Trump from coming. Uhlfelder asked the court to declare the event “a nuisance” and wanted an emergency temporary injunction requiring [its] cancellati­on.

The Pence rallies targeted two key voter demographi­cs in Florida.

Trump’s camp says it has made inroads with Hispanic voters, asU.S. Sen. Rick Scott did in 2018. Polls, though, have shown mixed messages about whether Biden is doing lesswell with Hispanic voters in Florida compared with Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Polls also have shown Biden winning the 65-and-older demographi­c, a big turnaround from

2016 if that holds. TheVillage­s is the largest senior community in the nation, spreading over Lake, Marion and Sumter counties, and went heavily for Trump in

2016.

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