Star-Telegram

Away from courtroom, Trump rallies beachside at Jersey Shore

- BY MICHAEL GOLD

After a long and often tense week in his criminal trial in Manhattan, former President Donald Trump on Saturday took part in a time-honored ritual enjoyed by countless New Yorkers in need of a break: He went to the shore.

Sandwiched between the boardwalk and the Atlantic Ocean, Trump stood in front of tens of thousands of people at a rally on the beach in Wildwood, New Jersey, where he largely repeated the same criticisms of President Joe Biden that have characteri­zed his stump speech in recent months.

Fresh from court, Trump insisted that his case in Manhattan, on charges that he falsified business records related to a hushmoney payment, was a “Biden show trial,” even though there is no evidence to suggest that Biden has been involved in the case.

Trump railed against pro-Palestinia­n protests on college campuses, vowed to crack down on immigratio­n and repeated his false claims that Democrats stole the 2020 election from him.

But if Trump’s speech largely consisted of what has become his standard fare, the setting stood out. Though New Jersey has voted for Democratic presidenti­al candidates in every election since 1992, and Trump lost the state by double-digit margins in both 2016 and 2020, he insisted that he could win there in November.

“We’re expanding the electoral map, because we are going to officially play in the state of New Jersey,” Trump said to a packed crowd on the beach. “We’re going to win the state of New Jersey.”

Trump, who once owned casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and who often spends summers at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, has been publicly bullish on his chances in New Jersey for months. Political experts, and even some of his advisers, are skeptical.

Still, parts of the state are deeply conservati­ve, including the area around Wildwood, a boardwalk town on the southern end of the Jersey Shore and a beach destinatio­n popular with working-class families. Many visitors come from Pennsylvan­ia, a battlegrou­nd state that backed Trump in 2016 but swung to Biden in 2020.

Trump’s rally, held shortly before the start of the summer season, brought hordes of people to the boardwalk, where many of the vendors who usually hawk an array of novelty items filled the front of their stores with Trump-related T-shirts and hats. Supporters stretched out on blankets and dabbed on sunscreen hours ahead of Trump’s arrival.

Against the backdrop of classic Americana, Trump repeated his typical criticism that Biden’s economic policies were hurting the middle class. With an amusement park operating rides in the background, he insisted that only he could preserve the summer shore tradition.

“The choice for New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia is simple,” Trump said, telling supporters to vote for him if they wanted “lower costs, higher income and more weekends down at the shore.”

The rally was a stark contrast to the scene at the Manhattan courthouse, where proceeding­s are more sober and Trump’s comments are limited to remarks to reporters before he enters and leaves the courtroom.

At his rally, Trump largely built on statements he has made in those limited appearance­s. He once again criticized Biden for warning Israel that he would not supply the country with weapons if it launched a major ground offensive, and he made his most explicit approval yet of Israel’s military strategy.

“I support Israel’s right to win its war on terror,” he told the crowd. “Is that OK? I don’t know. I don’t know if that’s good or bad politicall­y. I don’t care.”

The rally in New Jersey was only Trump’s third since his trial began last month. Last week, he held back-to-back events in Wisconsin and Michigan, two battlegrou­nd states expected to be more critical than New Jersey in the November election.

Trump, who is bound by a gag order in the case that keeps him from commenting on witnesses and jurors, limited his criticism of the case Saturday. The judge in the case has found him in contempt, fining him $10,000 for violating the order and warning of possible jail time.

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