ST. CLOUD - Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate JD Vance went hard after Vice President Kamala Harris on Saturday in their first joint Minnesota appearance, portraying the presumptive Democratic nominee as a failure and mocking her for everything from being a San Francisco prosecutor to her laugh.
Trump said voters would reject Harris’ “crazy liberal extremism” in a “massive landslide.” He and Vance repeatedly called her the “border czar,” blaming her for the migrant crisis at the nation’s southern border. If she’s elected, Trump said, Harris would “kill Social Security and Medicare” while making inflation worse.
Under the Democrats, Trump said, the United States would face “four more years of weakness, chaos and probably World War III,” while he would bring back “leadership, competence, common sense and strength.”
A capacity crowd of 8,000 filled the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center, and hundreds took up standing-room-only space on what would be the ice sheet in the St. Cloud State University arena. Thousands more who couldn’t get in watched the speech on a large screen outside the arena, cheering wildly when Trump called out to them multiple times.
Both Trump and Vance repeatedly railed against “illegal aliens” and complained about the media and the last election. They detailed few policy proposals of their own beyond “overfunding the police” rather than defunding them, and indicated they will portray Harris as overly friendly to criminals in the campaign.
Trump called Harris a “radical left lunatic,” saying “her big thing” is to “defund the police.” Harris has not pushed that position since the movement in 2020, and Trump said she should be held accountable for her initial support: “Politicians don’t change,” he said.
The crowd broke into chants of “USA!” and “Fight, fight, fight” frequently through the event. Though President Joe Biden has dropped out of the race, Trump targeted him for plenty of criticism, ranging from the president’s speech patterns to how he navigates stairs.
Rally attendees had lined up to get in as early as 2 a.m. When the doors closed before 6 p.m. , hundreds — if not thousands — remained outside in the muggy 90-degree heat.