Donald Trump will headline his eighth campaign event in Iowa in a little more than a month on Sunday as part of the former president’s accelerated fall schedule leading up to the first-in-the-nation caucuses in January.
Quick Read
- Donald Trump is set to headline his eighth campaign event in Iowa within a little over a month.
- The event is at the historic Orpheum Theater in downtown Sioux City.
- Trump recently had events in New Hampshire and Nevada.
- His campaign aims for dominant early-state victories over rivals.
- Trump was fined $10,000 for violating an order in his New York civil fraud trial.
- Donald Trump Jr. visited West Des Moines to praise volunteers during a caucus training session.
- Trump Jr. believes that the numerous legal cases against his father boost his political standing.
- Since late September, Trump has attracted approximately 14,000 attendees in Iowa, while other 2024 candidates have seen smaller crowds.
- Trump anticipates a significant victory in Iowa, deviating from the usual strategy of managing expectations.
- Florida Governor Ron DeSantis criticized Trump for avoiding Republican presidential debates and only appearing before large audiences.
- Trump will not participate in the third debate scheduled for Nov. 8.
- Some of Trump’s recent remarks, particularly about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have alienated potential supporters.
- Rev. Joseph Brown, an evangelical pastor, criticized Trump’s comments about Netanyahu during the Israel-Hamas conflict.
The Associated Press has the story:
Trump returns to Iowa Sun., his 8th campaign stop in little more than a month
Newslooks- DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)
Donald Trump will headline his eighth campaign event in Iowa in a little more than a month on Sunday as part of the former president’s accelerated fall schedule leading up to the first-in-the-nation caucuses in January.
Trump’s planned speech at the historic Orpheum Theater in downtown Sioux City, in GOP-heavy western Iowa, follows events Monday in New Hampshire and Saturday in Nevada. The Republican’s campaign has long tried to show its dominance over his rivals with big early-state victories.
The stop also comes after he was fined $10,000 by the judge in his New York civil fraud trial for violating an order prohibiting him from verbally attacking court personnel.
Son Donald Trump Jr. was in West Des Moines at the campaign’s state headquarters Thursday, where he applauded about 50 volunteers who were attending a caucus training session. The training was part of what Trump’s team has promised will be a more disciplined effort in Iowa than in 2016, when he finished second to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.
Afterward his visit, Trump Jr. told reporters that the list of legal cases facing the former president will ultimately boosts his political cause.
“I think a lot of this stuff helps,” the younger Trump said. “If it was one thing that they picked and that they focused on, maybe there would be some merit. But the deluge … it just seems rather extreme.”
The former president has drawn roughly 14,000 people to events in eastern and central Iowa since late September, while other candidates in the 2024 race have competed for much smaller audiences as they try to emerge as the most viable alternative.
Trump has said he expects to win Iowa big as he defies the typical strategy of lowering expectations. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is campaigning aggressively in Iowa, has criticized Trump for skipping the series of Republican presidential debates and campaigning only before large audiences.
Trump will skip the third debate, scheduled for Nov. 8.
“Donald Trump’s not willing to show up. He’s missing in action right now,” DeSantis told CNN on Thursday.
While Trump’s appearances have drawn large crowds to gyms, event centers and hotel ballrooms, some of his recent statements at the onset of the war between Israel and Hamas have turned off would-be supporters.
Trump’s criticism of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over what he described as insufficient support for the military strike on a top Iranian general in January 2020 was in poor taste, said the Rev. Joseph Brown, an politically active evangelical pastor in small-town Washington, Iowa.
“In a time of war, and great heartache and trial, criticizing the leadership of our strongest Middle Eastern ally?” Brown said. “This guy was in the middle of watching moms and dads weeping over their little babies who had just been killed.”