Live Blog: Former President Donald Trump's campaign rally in Asheville
Former President Donald Trump will speak at a campaign rally at the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium at Harrah’s Cherokee Center on Wednesday at 4 p.m. Doors open at 1 p.m. BPR reporters Felicia Sonmez, Lilly Knoepp, Gerard Albert III and Laura Hackett are reporting from the event.
Campaign event over but merch still available
Supporters and opponents of Trump lined the streets of Asheville, but another group capitalized on the former president's visit: dozens of merchandise vendors.
Catherine Hooten made the drive from South Carolina to sell Trump-themed merchandise. She set up her merch station outside of the venue.
T-shirts and hats, emblazoned with “Make America Great Again” and “Built Trump Tough” are for sale. One of her most popular items, she says, is a red visor with a blonde toupee attached to the top.
She admits the toupees aren’t the best looking, comparing them to looking like “Barbie doll hair” and “Beetlejuice.” For a good toupee, it’s best to use human hair, she says.
Hooten says it’s her first time visiting Asheville. For her, the experience has been a mixed bag.
“I have seen people scream for the other side. They hate Trump. I have heard some racist comments and have been told that we shouldn't be here because we're Black,” she says. “I don't let it get to me. I let people feel how they feel.”
Hooten says she supports Trump for economic reasons.
“He knows how to bring some money back to America. I can say that we didn't struggle much with him.”
When she’s not selling Trump merchandise, Hooten works as a hairstylist. She says she’d love to fashion a high-quality toupee for Trump.
“If you need me to, you know, I'll be his personal hairstylist,” she says.
Speech concludes as Trump promises prosperity
As Trump wraps up his speech, he draws the biggest applause of the event, declaring his support for the Second Amendment and his opposition to a raft of issues including transgender rights and “critical race theory.” And he pledges to bring prosperity to all Americans.
The crowd leaps to its feet as he speaks.
“For that to happen, we must never let Kamala Harris get anywhere near the White House. … She destroyed San Francisco. She’s not going to destroy our country,” Trump says.
“Y.M.C.A.” blasts on the auditorium’s speakers as Trump waves to the crowd and exits the stage.
Trump repeats lies about migrant crime
Trump falsely alleges that migrant crime is "beyond control."
"These people are brutal," he says, labeling immigrants "tough," "mean" and "angry."
"The migrants that Harris let in are raping our women and hurting our children, and now Kamala wants to let them pillage social security and Medicare," he says.
His oft-repeated false claim about "migrant crime" has been disproven by several sources. Immigrants are less likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans.
He presents himself as a savior from this fate, saying if he gets in office, these alleged dangers won't happen because he will issue the "largest deportation in U.S. history."
Trump also falsely claims that some students can't go to school in America because immigrant children are taking their places.
“As president I will seal the border," he promises.
Trump slams electric cars, claims his administration never 'got credit' on COVID response
Trump goes on an extended riff about border security, drilling and crime, then discusses his administration’s response to the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.
“We never really got the credit we deserved for that,” Trump says. "We did a good job."
He draws cheers for declaring that he will roll back some of the Biden administration’s efforts to promote electric vehicle use.
“You should be able to go out and buy what you want,” Trump says.
He finally returns to the main theme of his event, accusing the Harris campaign of having “viciously, ruthlessly copied” his “No Tax on Tips” plan.
And he draws some of the biggest cheers of the event so far when he proclaims that, if he is elected, “There will be no tax on Social Security.”
“With your vote, I will end this injustice and I will always protect Medicare and Social Security for our great seniors,” Trump says to applause.
'Drill, baby! Drill!'
"We will drill baby drill," Trump says. "We're going to bring energy prices down."
The crowd chants "Drill, baby! Drill!"
Trump threatens that the drilling will stop if Harris succeeds in her White House bid.
Trump talks about the oilfields in Alaska.
"We want clear air. We want clean water. But we don't want to destroy our country," Trumps says, asserting that everyone is an environmentalist.
He promises the crowd that their gas and heating bills will come down but does not explain how.
He pokes fun at wind energy, and he criticizes Harris for her past opposition to fracking.
"Your quality of life is gonna collapse under these lunatics," Trump tells the crowd.
Trump continues to hammer opponent
Trump briefly mentions his “No Tax on Tips” plan, which he introduced earlier this year. He notes that Harris has rolled out a similar plan. He then continues to focus the bulk of his remarks on attacking Harris.
“She’s not smart. She’s not intelligent,” Trump says of Harris, echoing remarks he has made at other recent rallies.
He also seizes on the fact that Harris has taken few questions from reporters since becoming the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.
“Essentially, they’re keeping her in the basement,” Trump says, reprising an attack he has made against Biden in the past.
Trump also calls Harris’s running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, “a clown.”
If Harris is elected, Trump tells the crowd, the United States will experience a “Kamala economic crash, a 1929-style Depression.”
But so far, he has given few details of his own plans.
'We’re doing this as an intellectual speech,' Trump says
Trump spends the first 10 minutes of his speech taking aim at his political opponents, before announcing that the theme of the speech is going to be focused on economic issues such as inflation.
“We’re doing this as an intellectual speech,” Trump says.
The signs flanking him onstage suggest that he will focus on policies affecting two of Asheville’s largest constituencies: seniors and service workers.
But just minutes later, Trump is again making personal attacks against Harris, this time taking aim at her laugh.
“What happened to that laugh? I haven’t heard that laugh in about a week. … That’s the laugh of a crazy person,” Trump says.
Trump criticizes the economy under the Biden administration, making claims about rates of unemployment and inflation. The highest rate of unemployment in the last decade was in April 2020, during the Trump administration, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Trump takes the stage
The auditorium greets Trump with a long standing ovation as he enters to Lee Greenwood’s “Proud to Be An American” and stands onstage for several minutes.
The crowd then breaks into a chant of “USA! USA!”
“A big hello to North Carolina. Thank you,” Trump says to cheers.
He gives a shoutout to Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, “the next governor of North Carolina.” And he references Vice President Kamala Harris without naming her, calling her a “radical left person from San Francisco.”
“They’re a threat to democracy,” Trump says of Harris and Biden, turning a familiar Democratic line back against his opponents.
A few minutes later, Trump references his Democratic rival by name: “We’re going to defeat Kamala Harris,” he says, drawing cheers.
Some supporters turned away with Thomas Wolfe Auditorium at capacity
Several hundred people who waited in line to hear the former president were turned away from entering the building.
Small groups of anti-Trump protestors remain on the sidewalk opposite of the auditorium where about 2,500 people inside await Donald Trump's speech.
The anti-Trump contigent on the street are exchanging jeers with about a dozen Trump supporters who have not left the line yet. Police started to clear the crowds outside of the auditorium.
Closer to the entrance, another group of about 100 people who didn’t make it inside remain, chanting and waving American flags.
'People in WNC know when they’re getting played,' says Cooper of Trump campaign event
Timed with Trump's campaign event, N.C. Gov. Roy Cooper issued a statement blaming Trump for running "our economy into the ground."
“People in Western North Carolina know when they’re getting played because they experienced it when then-President Donald Trump ran our economy into the ground like he drove his own casinos into bankruptcy, with low wages for working people, fewer jobs and high unemployment," Cooper wrote.
"Trump’s new plan, Project 2025, doubles down on these bad policies where billionaires win and North Carolina families lose. Donald Trump is a bad bet North Carolina can’t afford, while Kamala Harris is a proven winner who’s delivered for our state.”
Cooper dropped out of consideration to be Harris' running mate. The Associated Press reported Cooper was concerned about Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, who is running for governor, becoming acting governor when Cooper traveled out of state on the campaign trail.
Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson says Trump will bring back 'good times'
North Carolina lieutenant governor and Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson takes the stage to cheers and receives a standing ovation from the now-full auditorium.
Robinson, who has been endorsed by Trump, is known for his inflammatory statements about LGBTQ people, women and others.
But today, he notably strikes a different tone, casting himself as a candidate who can persuade voters from across the aisle.
Robinson opens his remarks by talking about a woman he recently met who said she was voting for him and also for Harris. Robinson says he convinced the woman to change her mind.
“How do we get the good times back? We re-elect Donald Trump,” he says.
The crowd is at its most animated so far, bursting out into cheers multiple times during Robinson’s brief remarks.
Robinson criticizes his Democratic opponent, N.C. Attorney General Josh Stein. He accused, without offering evidence, Stein's wife of leading a charge against Robinson's wife, Yolanda Hill.
Last month, DHHS ordered Hill's nonprofit to repay $132,000 in federal funding after a review found the organization "seriously deficient." Hill closed the entity in April when the department's Division of Child and Family Well-Being started its investigation, according to reporting from WUNC.
Anna Stein, however, does not work in that division. She is a legal specialist in DHHS' Chronic Disease and Injury Section
Rep. Chuck Edwards and Sen. Ted Budd take the stage
Rep. Chuck Edwards takes the stage to rally the crowd by responding to the Harris campaign’s recent slogan, “We’re Not Going Back.”
“We want to go back to a White House run by Donald J. Trump,” Edwards said, prompting cheers from the crowd. “We want to go back. We want to go back to when America was strong."
"Yes, Kamala Harris," he says, "we want to go back, because going back means making America great again.”
Edwards represents the 11th district in the U.S. House of Representatives. He faces democratic nominee Caleb Rudow in the fall.
U.S. Senator Ted Budd follows Edwards, repeating his call for Trump's return to the White House.
“Is this Trump country? YES!" Budd says. “Do you know why we support Donald J. Trump? Because we were better off when he was in the White House.”
We are worse off 4 years later, Budd says. He takes a jab at Vice President Kamala Harris and the Inflation Act.
“That might work in San Francisco but that won’t work in Western North Carolina!” he says.
Several dozen protestors ditch designated zones
As droves of Trump supporters continue to make their way towards the entrance of the Thomas Wolfe auditorium, a handful of counterprotestors press as close as they could get to them — across the street and behind a chain link fence.
Bob Carson and his wife Sandy hold signs that read “dump Trump.”
“He’s such a big step backward you have to do something,” Bob says. “I think he epitomizes everything that’s bad about the United States.
Sandy says she is especially worried about women’s reproductive rights and access to abortion.
“They don’t care about taking away all sorts of rights,” she says.
Despite the city designated protest zone about 100 yards uphill, the pair joined about two dozen other people holding signs for Kamala Harris, and against Trump.
The closest zone, a parking lot blocked off by safety-orange fencing has been almost empty for most of the afternoon. The distance from the entrance of the auditorium made it almost impossible to see from the road.
“It’s a real mistake to try to separate the factions. It’s necessary to be here to see exactly what the opponents look like. They should see us we should see them and hopefully learn something.” Bob says.
Margaret Clawson was among the protesters who ditched the designated demonstration zones and stood with a pro-Harris sign.
“I can’t sit back and not say I didn’t do something when the world is on fire especially our country,” she says.
Clawson is a stay at home mother of three who said her focus is on future generations.
“Maybe there are some independent voters in line that maybe this sign might have an impact on them to think of their kids and grandkids and the future,” she says.
WNC Democrats criticize Trump record on tax cuts for wealthy
Several dozen supporters gathered at the Buncombe County Democratic Party office in Asheville Wednesday morning for a press conference, responding to Trump’s event.
Entering the room to cheers, State Party Chair Anderson Clayton criticized Trump’s first term.
“North Carolinians know that Donald Trump left our communities out to dry as president of the United States,” Clayton said.
“Driving over 6,000 manufacturing jobs out of North Carolina, leaving rural hospitals on the brink of shutting down, and focusing on getting tax cuts to billionaires and big corporations instead of renewing and rebuilding our infrastructure.”
A fact check earlier this year by PolitiFact found "Trump-signed legislation ... on average (was poised to) cut taxes for households in each income group, but that taxpayers in higher-income households would see the biggest benefits." The fact check used data from an analysis by the Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, conducted in 2017 while Trump was in office.
In 2020, Trump lost to President Joe Biden in Buncombe County by more than 30,000 votes. But the former reality television star won all of the state’s westernmost counties in the election.
N.C. Rep. Caleb Rudow, who faces U.S. Rep. Chuck Edwards in a battle to represent Western North Carolina's 11th Congressional District, emphasized how a second term for Trump would hurt Buncombe County.
“Donald Trump's Project 2025 agenda will jack up prices and weaken the middle class,” Rudow said.
“His plans will raise taxes for working families here by thousands while continuing to cut taxes for those making millions. Trump's disastrous tariff plan will raise prices on everyday items pushing costs up even higher.”
Rudow praised the Democrat's presidential nominee. Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Gov. Tim Walz, saying: They are “the only candidates fighting for families and fighting for Western North Carolina.”