Donald Trump resumed his campaign on Thursday with a trip to Arizona, his first appearance in a state with no clear political preference since he was convicted of improper payments to silence damaging news, reiterating that the case against him was politically motivated and demanding that overturn his conviction on appeal.
“Those appeals courts have to step up and fix things or we’re going to be left without a country,” Trump said during an event in Phoenix organized by Turning Point, a conservative youth organization whose influence has been growing since Trump took control of the Republican Party.
Trump is expected to appeal his conviction last month for the 34 counts in his trial for improper payments in New Yorkin which he became the first former American president to be convicted of serious crimes.
The former president responded defiantly to the verdict against him a day after a New York jury convicted him last week of developing a plan to illegally influence the 2016 elections through a payment to silence a porn actress, but it was nothing more than until Thursday when he addressed directly the voters of a state without clear political preference, who will decide the November elections, expressing himself with rudeness to denounce a “false” and politically motivated case.
The thousands of attendees inside a megachurch, where the bass of the pre-music and intro were so loud it shook seats and media cameras, chanted the same profanity in response.
The Phoenix Police Department said 11 attendees were hospitalized for heat stroke. The temperature outside was 41.6 Celsius (107 Fahrenheit) at the time Trump began his speech, and many of the former president’s supporters were unable to enter the venue.
Trump’s condemnation angered his followers, who injected tens of millions of dollars into his campaign immediately after the ruling was announced. Trump blames President Joe Biden for his conviction, although the case was brought by the locally elected New York district attorney, and many of his allies are demanding revenge.
“What are they going to campaign with?” Juan Arredondo, a resident of Peoria, Arizona, asked himself while waiting to enter the Trump rally. “They can’t campaign on the border. “They can’t campaign on the economy.”
Connect with the Voice of America! Subscribe to our channels Youtube, WhatsApp and to the newsletter. Turn on notifications and follow us on Facebook, x and instagram.
Add Comment