Houston Chronicle

Trump’s ‘thank you’ tour begins at Cincinnati rally

President-elect re-energized by boisterous crowd

- By Nick Corasaniti and Michael D. Shear

CINCINNATI — A triumphant Donald Trump soaked up the adulation of thousands of supporters here on Thursday as he kicked off a two-week “thank you” tour featuring rallies meant to capture the campaign-style frenzy that sent him to the White House.

For Trump, who in the three weeks since the election has mostly stayed behind closed doors putting together his Cabinet, the Ohio rally provided a respite from those sometimes fraught deliberati­ons.

The rally took Trump back to U.S. Bank Arena, where tens of thousands of people gathered in midOctober for a raucous campaign event. The crowd was noticeably smaller this time; thousands of seats remained empty as Trump started his remarks.

The event carried the hallmarks of Trump’s whiplash style during the election: indicting and promising, nostalgic and forward-looking. He resurrecte­d signature applause lines like the pledge to “make America great again” and, in a surprise, announced a Cabinet nomination, retired Gen. James Mattis for secretary of defense.

Trump opened his rally with a familiar trope: gawking at the crowd and lamenting the difficulty that supporters were having traveling to the arena.

“So I didn’t know what came with this position, and I didn’t know that they closed down the roads around the stadium for an hour and a half,” he said, thanking the crowd “for being so patient.”

“I’m here today for one main reason: to say thank you to Ohio,” Trump told the crowd. “Thank you. We won the state by almost 10 points, which they say is totally unheard-of.”

Trump relished reminding the boisterous crowd of his election opponent Hillary Clinton, noting that “we had a lot of fun fighting Hillary Clinton.”

He smiled broadly but did not react to the crowd’s chants of “Lock her up!” that followed.

Those who attended expressed pride in his election and hope that the president-elect would be able to make good on his promise to make the country better.

“He wasn’t originally my guy, but the more he spoke, the more he spoke to what rural America, what we want, it was just down to earth,” said Kim Pollack, 50, who took a break from her two jobs and drove two hours to attend her first Trump rally.

The president-elect plans several more rallies in the next two weeks, most in swing states where his surprise victories helped power him to victory in the Electoral College. But aides to Trump have been quick to correct anyone who refers to the trips as a “victory tour,” calling them instead a “thank you” tour.

They say it is an opportunit­y for Trump to get back out in the country and connect with those who helped elect him president.

 ?? John Minchillo / Associated Press ?? Supporters cheer for President-elect Donald Trump during the first stop of his post-election tour on Thursday in Cincinnati.
John Minchillo / Associated Press Supporters cheer for President-elect Donald Trump during the first stop of his post-election tour on Thursday in Cincinnati.

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