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Jun 25, 2025  |  
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Sarah Cowgill


NextImg:Trump on the Rally Road in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin - Liberty Nation News

Former President Donald Trump hit the rally road to the swing states of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin over the weekend to remind voters that he’s the man of the people and, if possible, to give these crucial battlegrounds a shove back into the red, politically speaking. Trump’s messaging had a familiar ring; the economy, crime, illegal immigration — and Joe Biden driving the country toward Third World status.

The campaign stylings of Trump and President Joe Biden are polar opposites. Biden loves to appear grandfatherly, quiet, reserved, and ready to give a kid a quarter to buy a stick of candy — until someone makes Paw Paw mad, and he lashes out and calls people names. Trump comes off as a fun visiting uncle — a little crazy, loads of fist-bumping and dancing around. But you always know where he stands and what he believes, and somehow that is more interesting than the current president’s message: Finish the job.

So how did The Donald, convicted of 34 felony counts, fare in the Keystone and Badger states? He rocked his rallies and made a few new friends along the way with his latest message, which appealed to those hard-working people in the food industry.

Racine is about 30 miles south of Milwaukee, where the Republican National Committee will hold its official nominating convention. In 2020, Racine County went for Trump with 52% and 47% for Biden.

This past spring, the Marquette University Law poll surveyed 814 registered voters in Wisconsin with a makeup of 34% Republican, 31% Democratic, and 34% independent. Here’s why there was a packed house: Biden and Trump are neck and neck at 49% and 51%, respectively. The breakdown is that the slightest of majorities believes Trump is better at handling immigration and border security, plus the economy, the Israel-Hamas war, and foreign relations.

Biden had the lead on health care, abortion policy, and Medicare and Social Security. Trump played his cards well, taking the stage at 4 p.m. at the Racine Festival Park. It was a hot day, but that did not deter rallygoers, and Mother Nature stepped in with a cool breeze off the harbor. The former president kicked the whole shebang off, undoing his rumored snub at Milwaukee: “You know, I love Milwaukee. I was the one that picked Milwaukee.” The crowd cheered, and he went into punching out immigration failures, crime, and the economy.

To the interactive crowd:

“Crooked Joe is sending a message to the world that he rewards illegal entry, and that’s what’s happening. Don’t kid yourself: the ones that are hurt the most are the black population, the Hispanic population. And you know who else is hurt badly? Unions.”

Check, check, and checkmate. “Get out and vote everybody, God bless you all,” Trump said at the end of his speech, but he, as well as a lot of GOP folks, hung around dancing to YMCA.

During a 2020 presidential debate, the former president warned: “Bad things happen in Philadelphia.” He could be right if he doesn’t win the state, and that small observation becomes akin to “basket of deplorables.” But all seemed to be forgiven once he touched down in the Keystone State.

The folks of Pennsylvania’s bluest big city, Philadelphia, gathered on the campus of Temple University at the Liacouras Center, where Trump made his case. But first, typical of his unscheduled stops, Trump swung into Tony and Nick’s Steaks to grip and grin. Owner Nicky Lucidonio called the former president’s visit an “unbelievable” moment. For those patrons and staffers, it was indeed momentous.

A teenage boy dressed in a blue suit, red tie, and a Trump blond wig made a new friend and a few bucks. Upon spotting the kid, Trump went over, whipped out his wallet, took a $20 bill and a fine Sharpie pen, signed his signature, and took a photo. The big smile sporting braces, holding up the bill, and tears streaming down his face went viral.

The second “unbelievable” moment was Trump promising to wait staff that he would eliminate taxes on tips for those who work in service industry-related jobs. He left a $500 tip for staff and wrote on the ticket: “No tax on tips.”

Trump finally made it to the arena with a crowd of 10,000 or so and more spilling outside and lining his route. Supporters braved 100-degree heat wearing mugshot tees that said “Never Surrender” and carrying signs reading “No More Bull****.”

The message and high energy matched Racine’s. But the crowd was a bit different in Philly. For a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans by 7-1, minority support has grown since 2020. In Philadelphia, Trump garnered only 5% of that voting group against Biden. Yet the minorities were on hand to speak to the local news as to why they were in sweltering heat to hear the former president speak.

The Philadelphia Inquirer was ground zero for pro-Trump remarks. “Everybody knows he’s not polished,” Kristopher Liu told the daily. “That’s how he is. That’s how he talks. But look what he’s done for the country.”

“It’s President Trump who says, ‘I’m going to open up opportunities for everybody, not just one, but for everybody,’” said James Earl Jones, a black Philadelphia business owner relayed to the paper. “And that’s what we need.”

Bonnie Harmon, sporting a “Blacks for Trump 2020″ shirt, advised people to move on and give Trump his due: “What is in his heart right now, in real time, that’s what we have to look at,” she said.

Trump’s message of Biden’s mass illegal immigration draining the coffers all across the nation, unchecked military threats, and the inability of Americans to make ends meet resonated in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

After the Racine event, where Trump got a laugh over the east and west coastal elites, saying, “Much better this, or sitting on the Pacific or the Atlantic, which has sharks,” Trump said to laughter from the crowd. “I’ll take the one without the sharks.”

Both states are critical to winning the whole kit and kaboodle come Nov. 5.  Former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker took the stage wearing an American flag shirt and stated: “We can’t afford four more years of Joe Biden. We need President Donald Trump to make Wisconsin and America affordable.”

“We win Wisconsin, we win America,” Walker crowed. In Philly, Trump followed days later: “We win Pennsylvania,” Trump said, “we win the presidency.” And no one has to fact-check those statements.