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Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign

Then-incumbent president of the United States Donald Trump, a member of the Republican Party, unsuccessfully sought reelection in the 2020 United States presidential election. He had been inaugurated for his first term on January 20, 2017, and officially announced his re-election campaign on June 18, 2019.

Donald Trump for President 2020
Campaign
Candidate
AffiliationRepublican Party
Status
  • Announced: June 18, 2019[a]
  • Presumptive nominee: March 17, 2020
  • Official nominee: August 24, 2020
  • Election day: November 3, 2020
  • Projected defeat: November 7, 2020[1][2]
  • Formally conceded: January 7, 2021
  • Left office: January 20, 2021
HeadquartersArlington, Virginia[3]
Key people
ReceiptsUS$811,898,514.36[19] (October 14, 2020)
Slogan
  • Keep America Great![20][21]
  • Promises made, promises kept[22]
  • Jobs! Jobs! Jobs!
  • Keep America Working
Theme song"Y.M.C.A." by Village People
Website
www.donaldjtrump.com

Trump began his re-election campaign unusually early for an incumbent president. He began spending money on his reelection effort within weeks of his election and officially filed his campaign with the Federal Election Commission on the day of his inauguration. From February 2017 onward, Trump held more than 150 rallies and fundraisers for this campaign, visiting key electoral states. The campaign also raised funds and ran two nationwide advertising campaigns. Trump said in several stump speeches that the slogans for the 2020 race would be "Keep America Great" and "Promises Made, Promises Kept".[23][24][25] On November 7, 2018, Trump confirmed that Mike Pence would be his vice presidential running mate in 2020.[26] Trump's re-election bid was ultimately unsuccessful; the 2020 election was won by the Democratic Party ticket of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. This marked the first time since 1992 that an incumbent president lost reelection.

Trump refused to accept the results; he and his allies made false and disproven claims of fraud, pressured elections officials, filed several unsuccessful lawsuits,[27][28][29] and directly attempted to overturn the results at the county, state, and federal level. This culminated in the attack on the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, for which Trump was impeached a second time. The day after the attack, Trump stated that a "new administration" would be succeeding his, without mentioning president-elect Biden by name, in a video posted on Twitter.[30][31][32]

Background edit

Trump's predecessors merged their campaign committees into their party's committee following their election victories. Following his 2016 election victory, Trump eschewed this presidential tradition and retained a separate campaign committee which continued raising funds. In December 2016, the campaign raised $11 million.[33] These moves indicated that Trump was already eyeing a 2020 run.[34]

Trump started spending money on the 2020 race on November 24, 2016 (sixteen days after the end of the 2016 election). The earliest campaign disbursement that his committees reported was spent towards the 2020 presidential primaries was for the purchase of a Delta Air Lines ticket on this date.[35]

Trump officially filed his re-election campaign with the FEC on January 20, 2017, the day of his inauguration.[36][37][38][39] Trump launched his re-election campaign earlier in his presidency than his predecessors did. Barack Obama (2012), George W. Bush (2004), Bill Clinton (1996), George H. W. Bush (1992) and Ronald Reagan (1984) all declared their candidacies for reelection in the third year of their presidencies.[40][41] His immediate successor, Joe Biden (2024), also declared his candidacy for reelection in the third year of his presidency. Trump filed the papers for his re-election campaign approximately 47 months prior to the date of the election.[40] In contrast, both Reagan and George H. W. Bush did so approximately twelve, George W. Bush approximately eighteen, and both Clinton and Obama (and later Biden) approximately nineteen months before those elections.[40]

While previous presidents had held rallies in the early days of their presidency to garner support for legislation, such rallies differed from Trump's in that they were funded by the White House rather than by campaign committees.[41][42] One of the advantages of having his campaign committee fund the events is that organizers can more discriminately screen attendees, refusing entry to non-supporters.[43] Trump's February 2017 rally in Melbourne, Florida, was the earliest campaign rally for an incumbent president.[44][45]

By filing for his campaign as early as he did, Trump gave himself a head start on fundraising. This theoretically helped discourage primary challengers.[45]

Since his three predecessors (Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama) won re-election, had Trump been reelected, it would have been the first time in American history that four consecutive presidents were elected to two terms.[46][47]

Permanent campaign edit

Although Trump's early campaign filing was extraordinarily unusual, aspects of a "permanent campaign" are not entirely unprecedented in American politics. Such a phenomenon had a presence in the White House at least as early as the presidency of Bill Clinton. Under the advice of Sidney Blumenthal, Clinton's staff continued to engage in campaign methodology once in office, using polling for assistance in making decisions.[44][48]

Political observers who bolster the opinion that a permanent campaign has had a significant impact on recent presidencies argue that decisions by presidents have increasingly been made with considerations to their impact on voter approval.[49]

The concept of a permanent campaign also describes the focus which recent presidents have given to electoral concerns during their tenures in office, with the distinction between the time they have spent governing and the time they have spent campaigning having become blurred.[49] Political observers consider the rise in presidential fundraising as a symptom of the permanent campaign.[49]

The disproportionately large amounts of time presidents have spent visiting key electoral states (and a comparatively small amount of time they have spent visiting states that pose little electoral importance to them) has been pointed to as evidence of ulterior electoral motives influencing presidential governance, emblematic of the blurred lines between campaigning and governance in the White House.[49][48] For instance, George W. Bush embarked on 416 domestic trips during his first three years in office. This was 114 more than his predecessor Bill Clinton made in his first three years.[48] In his first year, 36% of Bush's domestic trips were to the 16 states that were considered swing states after having been decided the closest margins during the 2000 election.[48] In his second year, 45% of his domestic travel was to these states, and his third year 39% of his domestic travel was to these states.[48]

According to the Associated Press, a data analysis firm named Data Propria, launched in May 2018 to provide ad-targeting services and run by former officials of Cambridge Analytica, is working on public relations for the Trump 2020 re-election campaign.[50][51][52]

Political positions edit

Emerging from the 2020 convention, the campaign agenda for a second term was primarily to build on the first term agenda.[53]

As some George Floyd protests included violent incidents, Trump emphasized "law and order" as a major campaign theme, directing particular criticism at antifa. Trump and attorney general Bill Barr asserted that antifa had organized the protests, although there was no evidence to support that. Barr had also baselessly linked antifa to the Black Lives Matter movement.[54][55][56] Three August 2020 DHS draft reports did not mention antifa as a domestic terrorism risk and ranked white supremacy as the top risk, higher than that of foreign terrorist groups.[57] Brian Murphy — until August 2020 the DHS undersecretary for intelligence and analysis — asserted in a September 2020 whistleblower complaint[58] that secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf and his deputy Ken Cuccinelli instructed him "to modify intelligence assessments to ensure they matched up with the public comments by President Trump on the subject of ANTIFA and 'anarchist' groups" and to downplay the severity of risk associated with white supremacy, which Murphy said he declined to do.[59] The campaign sent a fundraising text message to supporters in September 2020 stating an "ANTIFA ALERT," continuing, "They'll attack your homes if Joe's elected."[60]

Approval ratings edit

Presidential approval ratings, while rising slightly throughout the second half of his first term, have generally shown Trump to be one of the least popular presidents in the history of modern opinion polling during a presidential election year.[61][62][63] Political observers point out that presidential job approval is highly partisan,[64] with Gallup writing in March 2020:

The 92% approval among Republicans and 42% among independents are close to his highest ratings for those groups. Meanwhile, his approval rating among Democrats, currently 8%, hasn't been above 13% since he took office in February 2017. The current 84-point gap in approval between Republicans and Democrats is just a few points shy of the record polarization Gallup found in late January and early February.[65]

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in early spring 2020, Trump's approval rating saw a small but notable rally in support,[66][67] followed by a tick-down in mid-2020.[68][69][70] In June and July 2020, public polling showed Trump's approval significantly weakening.[71][72][73]

Domestic trips made by Donald Trump as U.S. president edit

The following maps document the frequency with which Trump has visited each state and territory during his presidency.

  Washington, D.C.
  7 or more visits
  6 visits
  5 visits
  4 visits
  3 visits
  2 visits
  1 visit
  0 visits

2017 campaign developments edit

January 2017: launch edit

On January 10, 2017, Politico reported that Trump would be keeping his campaign offices in Trump Tower open in order to lay the groundwork for a re-election campaign.[34] By that time his campaign offices at Trump Tower already included a staff of about ten people led by Republican strategist Michael Glassner.[34][4] Glassner's deputy is John Pence, nephew of Vice President Mike Pence.[4] The campaign staff was focused on data-building and fundraising for a 2020 re-election campaign.[34][74]

On January 18, Trump revealed, in an interview with The Washington Post, that he had decided Keep America Great would be his 2020 re-election campaign slogan.[20][75] Two days later, on the day of his inauguration, Trump filed a form with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) declaring that he qualified as a candidate for the 2020 presidential election.[36][38][39]

February 2017: first rally edit

 
Trump speaking at his first campaign rally in Florida

By February 1, 2017, Trump's re-election campaign had already raised over $7 million.[76]

The first rally organized by the campaign was held on February 18, 2017, in Melbourne, Florida,[77] and was attended by an estimated 9,000 supporters.[78] It was the earliest an incumbent president had ever held a re-election campaign rally.[44] During the rally, Trump defended his actions and criticized the media.[44] He referred to a nonexistent incident ("last night in Sweden ...") while criticizing the asylum policies of several European countries.[79] After backlash from the press and the Swedish government,[80][81] Trump said he was referring to a Fox News program aired the previous day.[82][83]

On February 24, Trump spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference,[84] an annual event which has often held a presidential straw poll.[85] However, the CPAC 2017 straw poll did not include a preference survey on presidential candidates.[86]

 
Trump laying a wreath at the tomb of Andrew Jackson at The Hermitage prior to his Nashville, Tennessee rally
 
Trump speaking at his rally in Nashville, Tennessee, March 15, 2017
 
Rally in Louisville, Kentucky, March 20, 2017

March 2017: second and third rallies edit

On March 4, there were a series of local rallies held by allies of the campaign in some fifty cities.[87] Several of the rallies were met by counter-demonstrations[88] where some protesters were arrested.[89][90] Other events were held around the country throughout March, some of which resulted in violence.[91]

The campaign's second rally was held a month later in Nashville on March 15, and coincided with the 250th birthday of Andrew Jackson. Prior to the rally, Trump paid tribute to Jackson and laid a wreath at his tomb.[92][93][94][95] During the rally, Trump promised to repeal the Affordable Care Act ('Obamacare') and defended his revised travel ban, which was put on hold by Derrick Watson, a federal judge in Hawaii, hours later.[96]

A third rally was held by the campaign in Louisville on March 20. At the rally, Trump promoted efforts to repeal Obamacare.[97]

On March 29, it was reported that Lara Trump, the president's daughter-in-law, had been hired as a consultant by the campaign's digital vendor Giles-Parscale.[98]

April 2017: fourth rally edit

By mid-April, the Trump campaign had a staff of around twenty employees.[99]

Trump gave a speech on April 28 at an event for the National Rifle Association of America.[100][101]

 
Trump and Pence arrive in Pennsylvania on April 29 for their rally in Harrisburg.

Trump held his fourth campaign rally on April 29 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, which coincided with the hundredth day of Trump's presidency.[102][103] It also took place the same night as the White House Correspondents' Dinner, which Trump did not attend.[103][104] In addition to Trump, Vice President Pence also spoke at the April 29 rally.

May 2017: launch of first advertising campaign edit

On May 1, the campaign announced that they were spending $1.5 million on national advertisements touting Trump's accomplishments in the first hundred days.[105][106] The ad buy, which included advertisements targeted at voters who supported specific agenda items of Trump's presidency,[105] came approximately 42 months before election day 2020,[39][106][107] or any other major party's candidate declarations.[107][108] FactCheck.org found several inaccuracies in the advertisement,[109] and Eric Zorn of the Chicago Tribune described the 30-second advertisement as being, "stuffed with Trump's signature misleading puffery".[108] Additionally, original versions of the ad showed Trump shaking hands with H. R. McMaster, an active-duty military member who was barred from participating in any political advocacy while in uniform.[110] Subsequent airings of the advertisement substituted this clip.[105][110]

The ad claimed that the "fake news" media refused to report the successes of the administration,[105][107][111] but Forbes pointed out that the ad itself cited mainstream media sources including CNBC, The Boston Globe and The New York Times.[111] Because of this accusation against the news media, CNN decided to stop running the ad, a decision that campaign manager Michael Glassner criticized as an action to "censor our free speech".[112] ABC, CBS and NBC later joined CNN in refusing to play the ad.[113] Lara Trump, a consultant to the campaign and the daughter-in-law of the president, called the ad removals "an unprecedented act of censorship in America that should concern every freedom-loving citizen".[113][114]

On May 8, shortly after reporter Cecilia Vega asked White House press secretary Sean Spicer about statements that Trump's 2016 campaign had issued in regards to temporarily banning Muslims from entering the United States, Trump's campaign website purged itself of all campaign statements from the 2016 campaign.[115][116] Campaign chairman Michael Glassner later announced that the website was being redesigned. The redesign of Trump's campaign website was seen by media sources as laying the groundwork for a full-bodied reelection campaign.[117][118] The Washington Examiner's David Druckert pointed out on Twitter that the redesigned website featured an image of Trump with a uniformed military officer on its 'Donate' page, which violated the Department of Defense's regulation that prohibits uniformed military officers from engaging in any political activity.[119]

On May 18, Trump hosted chairmen of the Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania state parties at the White House. Each of their states are considered to be presidential swing states.[120] On May 25, Trump's sons Donald Jr. and Eric, along with Eric's wife Lara, held a series of meetings at the Washington, D.C., offices of the Republican National Committee (RNC) to outline campaign strategy.[121][122]

June 2017: fifth rally, first fundraiser and visits to swing states edit

 
Counter-protesters at the Pittsburgh Not Paris Rally

On June 1, President Trump announced his plans to withdraw from the Paris Agreement saying, "I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris." Soon afterwards, the campaign announced it would hold a Pittsburgh Not Paris Rally across from the White House.[123][124] The rally was held June 3 at Lafayette Square. The event was sponsored by the Fairfax County Republican Committee and the Republican Party of Virginia.[125] Relatively few people attended the event,[123][126] with estimates varying from 200 people (including counter-protesters) to "dozens" of supporters.[125][126][127] By comparison, more people attended the anti-Trump March for Truth, which was held the same day.[128]

Trump began campaigning in Iowa in June. Iowa was considered to be a perennial swing state[129] and the Iowa caucus is scheduled as the earliest presidential primary election.[130] Iowa has also been home to nonbinding straw polls held ahead of the primaries (Trump won the 2015 straw poll among Republican candidates).[131]

On June 7, Trump delivered what the New York Daily News described as a "campaign-style speech" in Cincinnati, Ohio.[132] Five days later, reports surfaced that Trump was making plans to embark on a more expansive tour that would visit several battleground states.[133]

 
Trump in Iowa holding his fifth official rally of the campaign

Trump held his fifth official campaign rally in Cedar Rapids in eastern Iowa.[134][135] The area, home to a large population of working class whites, was seen as a strong region for Trump to find a base of political support.[136] The date for the rally, having been changed several times, was ultimately held on June 21,[137] marking the first time in his presidency that Trump traveled west of the Mississippi River.[138] At the rally, Iowa GOP state chairman Jeff Kaufmann verbally attacked Nebraskan senator Ben Sasse, who was speculated by some as a potential challenger to Trump in the 2020 Republican primaries.[139][140]

Vice President Pence attended Joni Ernst's 3rd Annual Roast and Ride fundraiser, held on June 3 at the Central Iowa Expo near Boone, Iowa.[141] The previous editions of this event have included presidential campaign appearances. Trump himself had previously attended Ernst's fundraiser in 2016 while campaigning in Iowa, and seven Republican presidential contenders attended the event in 2015.[142]

On June 28, the president hosted a fundraiser at his company's hotel in Washington, D.C., benefitting the Trump Victory Committee, a joint committee that raises funds both for his reelection campaign and for the RNC.[143][144][145] The fundraiser was the first event Trump hosted for the Victory Committee since becoming president,[143] as well as the first presidential campaign fundraiser. The event was co-organized by RNC chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel and RNC National Finance Chairman Steve Wynn.[143][145] The fundraiser was attended by about 300 guests and was reportedly expected to gross $10 million.[146][147] Trump was joined at the event by the first lady and top White House advisors.[148] Among those reported to have been in attendance at the fundraiser were Mica Mosbacher, Dean Heller and Katrina Pierson.[148][149][150] Additionally, Harold Hamm and a number of high-profile figures were spotted in the hotel's lobby during the event.[147] Press were barred from the event, a break of precedent since reporters were permitted to the first fundraisers held by each of Trump's two predecessors.[151] Trump's decision to host the event at a venue from which he personally profits garnered criticism.[146][152][153]

Throughout June, the president also gave speeches at events in the swing-states of Florida, Ohio, and Wisconsin.[136]

Lara Trump made appearances on behalf of the campaign at events in New York and Texas during the month of June.[154] In New York, Lara spoke at the Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel on June 20 for the annual New York Republican State Committee gala.[155]

By the end of June, Trump had visited fewer states in his first six months in office compared to his two immediate predecessors, Barack Obama and George W. Bush.[138] Both Obama and Bush had visited every time zone in the continental United States, while Trump had so far visited only the Eastern and Central time zones.[138] Obama and Bush also took both overnight and multiple-day trips throughout the country while Trump's domestic travels had largely been limited to a two-hour flight radius of Washington, D.C., and his overnight stays were at Camp David, Mar-a-Lago and Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster.[138] One of the benefits Trump was speculated to obtain from such trips is more favorable coverage from local news outlets in the areas visited.[136] Most of Trump's trips to Wisconsin were focused on the Milwaukee area in the southeast part of the state, which Trump won in 2016 by a smaller margin than Mitt Romney had in 2012.[136]

July 2017: sixth rally edit

On July 1, Trump delivered a speech at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts during an event honoring veterans. The event was sponsored by First Baptist Dallas and the Salem Media Group. The event was described as resembling one of Trump's campaign rallies.[156]

On July 6, The Hill reported that 2020 campaign merchandise bearing Trump's name (including merchandise supporting and opposing his candidacy) was selling more than those with the names of prospective opponents.[157]

First Daughter and Advisor to the President Ivanka Trump introduced Vice President Pence at a GOP fundraiser.[158]

In its mid-July financial disbursement filing, the campaign reported that on June 27, Donald Trump Jr. made a payment to Alan Futerfas for "legal consulting" regarding his attempt to get "dirt on Clinton" in the 2016 Trump Tower meeting between him, Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort, and one or more representatives of the Russian government.[159][160]

On July 24, Trump gave a highly political address at the National Scout Jamboree, a traditionally non-political event.[161]

 
Donald and Melania Trump at the campaign's sixth rally

Trump held his sixth campaign rally on July 25 at the Covelli Centre in Youngstown, Ohio.[162][163] During the speech, Trump reveled in addressing an audience outside of the national capital.[163] He also condemned "predators and criminal aliens" and called them "animals". Chicago Tribune writer Rex W. Huppke criticized this comment, comparing it to the previous day's remarks at the National Scout Jamboree.[164] Trump also made remarks on the homicide rate in Chicago, and called on the mayor, Rahm Emanuel, to "get tough"; Emanuel responded the following day, stating: "It is not about being tough, it's about being smart and strategic."[165]

September 2017 edit

 
Crowd at the Mother of All Rallies

On September 16, groups supporting Trump held a rally on the National Mall named the Mother of All Rallies. Organizers were originally hoping to draw a million attendees,[166] but in planning for security, the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia expected only eighteen hundred. Ultimately, only about a thousand people attended.[167]

A national organization had originally planned to hold "We Support Trump" rallies across the nation on September 9, however subsequently reneged on those plans.[168] However, an independent rally in support of Trump was subsequently announced to be held on that date in Georgetown, Delaware, in a county where Trump got a majority of the vote in 2016.[168] The Georgetown rally was sponsored by the Sussex County Republican Committee and attended by over 100 people.[169]

On September 26, Trump attended a campaign fundraising dinner hosted by the Republican National Committee in New York City. The event was reported to have raised nearly $5 million, with major donors spending up to $250,000 to dine with President Trump.[170] Trump scheduled for a quick meeting with Nikki Haley and other U.N. officials immediately prior the fundraiser; travel expenses were reportedly filed as "government business", and therefore taxpayer-funded.[170] Trump's pattern of mixing travel for fundraising activities with travel for government business has drawn criticism from government watchdog organizations.[170]

Trump was scheduled to headline a fundraiser in Dallas on September 27, which was canceled by its organizers in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey.[171]

October 2017 edit

On October 16, Trump indicated his desire to see his 2016 general election opponent, Hillary Clinton, run again in 2020. Clinton had previously asserted that she had no desire to run for public office again.[172]

On October 25, the president traveled to Texas for a fundraiser hosted by the Dallas County Republican Party for both the RNC and his reelection campaign.[171][170][173] The event was closed to the media. Mark Knoller noted, "By my count, this will be Pres Trump's 10th political fundraiser since taking office. 9 of 10 were closed to press coverage including today."[174]

November 2017 edit

In early November, ethics watchdogs and political analysts expressed concerns over Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump assuming a greater role in the White House, while also continuing to be an active member of Trump's reelection campaign.[175] Lara Trump, while working for the reelection campaign, had reportedly held private political meetings with government officials such as Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke, Veteran Affairs Committee chairman Phil Roe and Representative Ron DeSantis.[175]

December 2017 edit

In December 2017, polls showed that more than 40 percent of Americans wanted Trump impeached, reportedly higher than the percentage of Americans who said at the time that they planned to vote for him in 2020.[176]

2018 campaign developments edit

February 2018 edit

In February 2018, the Trump campaign sent out an email with a photo of Trump paying a hospital visit to a student survivor of the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. After stating that Trump prioritizes the safety of American students and schools, the email linked to the campaign's donations page.[177]

 
Brad Parscale was chosen as Trump's 2020 campaign manager in February 2018.

On February 25, the Drudge Report announced that the president had chosen Brad Parscale as the campaign manager for his re-election campaign.[178] Parscale was the digital strategist for the previous campaign as the head of Giles-Parscale, which raised some concerns about how the campaign would conduct its advertising.[179]

March 2018 edit

On March 10, Trump held a rally in Moon Township, Pennsylvania. He campaigned for Rick Saccone for the local special election and also declared that his 2020 campaign slogan would be "Keep America Great!"[180]

On March 13, Trump made his first trip to the state of California as president to attend a campaign fundraiser at the Beverly Hills home of Tampa Bay Buccaneers owner Ed Glazer.[181] The same day, it was announced that Katrina Pierson and John McEntee had been hired by the campaign as senior advisors.[182][183]

April 2018 edit

In 2018, Trump skipped the White House Correspondent's Dinner, holding a rally on the same night (as he had the previous year), this time in Washington, Michigan.[184]

May 2018 edit

In May, Trump held a rally in Indiana where he once again shared that his 2020 campaign slogan would be "Keep America Great!". Although he had already revealed this before, Trump told the supporters at his rally,

"Keep America Great!" Because we are doing so well that in another two years when we start the heavy campaign, "Make America Great Again" wouldn't work out too well. It's going to be "Keep America Great" because that's exactly where we are headed.[185]

June 2018 edit

On June 20, Trump held a rally in Duluth, Minnesota, supporting Republican Congressional candidate Pete Stauber in the 2018 midterm elections[186] and addressing his own 2020 prospects[187] in the state among other subjects. The rally came on the day the president had signed an executive order on the treatment of immigrant families with children.[186] At the rally he said enforcement at the border would be "just as tough" under the executive order.[187]

Trump traveled to the Nevada Republican Convention in Las Vegas on Saturday, June 23, and also appeared on the trip at a fundraiser for U.S. senator Dean Heller. Along with policy issues Trump addressed Heller's challenger, U.S. representative Jacky Rosen, as "Wacky Jacky". The president continued, asking of the simultaneous Nevada Democratic Party convention in Reno featuring Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, "Wacky Jacky is campaigning with Pocahontas, can you believe it?"[188]

On June 27, the president held a rally in Fargo, North Dakota, supporting Representative Kevin Cramer in his challenge to sitting Senator Heidi Heitkamp. Trump also addressed, at the rally, the just-announced news of the retirement from the Supreme Court of Justice Anthony Kennedy. Cramer addressed the issue of abortion and Heitkamp's position on the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act as his reason for entering the race. "'On behalf of the most forgotten people,' Mr. Cramer said to the president as both men took the stage to deafen applause, 'the unborn babies, thank you for standing for life.'"[189]

October 2018 edit

During a campaign rally in Houston on October 22, Trump defined himself as a nationalist, acknowledging the controversial use of the word.[190]

November 2018 edit

The campaign financed a number of rallies in support of Republican candidates in the Midterm election.[191] While the Republicans grew their Senate majority in the elections, they lost a significant amount of their House delegation, including control of the chamber.

On November 7, Trump confirmed that Mike Pence would be his vice-presidential running mate in 2020.[192]

December 2018 edit

The campaign makes the unprecedentedly early move to merge the campaign's field operations with that of the Republican National Committee.[193] The campaign tapped White House political director Bill Stepien and Director of Public Liaison Justin Clark as senior political advisors, who would focus on delegate organization and to ensure the 2020 Republican National Convention would run smoothly.[194]

2019 campaign developments edit

January–March 2019 edit

In January, in a unanimous vote, the Republican National Committee informally endorsed the president's campaign and coordination between the two entities formally began.[195]

In February, a state-by-state effort was launched by Trump's campaign team to oppose any presidential challenges from within the Republican Party. The campaign has used endorsements, lobbying and state-party rule changes to ensure Trump does not face opposition during the Republican nominating convention, with a senior campaign adviser calling it a "process of ensuring that the national convention is a television commercial for the president for an audience of 300 million and not an internal fight".[196][197]

El Paso rally edit

The first rally of the year took place at the El Paso County Coliseum, in El Paso, Texas on February 12. It was highlighted by pro-wall talking points and a BBC cameraman filming the event, getting into a scuffle with a supporter that the president disavowed.[198]

CPAC edit

From February 28 to March 3, the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC took place in National Harbor, Maryland. This year, the usual straw poll was not held, and on the last day, Trump made a two-and-a-half hour-long speech,[199] which was covered live by C-SPAN and Fox News and was prominently featured in media throughout the world.

Grand Rapids edit

On March 28, the president held a rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, during which he reveled in his alleged "exoneration" calling for Democrats to apologize for the Russia investigation and to stop the "ridiculous bullshit".[200]

Trump also attacked Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, as "little pencil-neck ... who has the smallest, thinnest neck I've ever seen", and someone who is "not a long-ball hitter". The president then ticked through those he felt wronged him as the crowd chanted, "Lock them up! Lock them up!"[201]

April–June 2019 edit

In April, Trump visited the border at Calexico, California[202] before attending campaign events in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.[203][204]

10th april, Trump has had a video removed from Twitter because it used Hans Zimmer's track Why Do We Fall? from The Dark Knight Rises without requesting copyright from Warner Bros Pictures.[205][206] Trump may also have referred to the Batman universe in his campaign.[207][208][209]

The New York Times reported in June 2019 that after Trump had been briefed on internal polling showing he was trailing Joe Biden in several key states, he instructed aides to deny it and to publicly state that other data showed him doing well. The next day, Trump tweeted, "The Fake (Corrupt) News Media said they leaked into polling done by my campaign ... They reported Fake numbers that they made up and don't even exist," later telling reporters, "we are winning in every single state that we polled." Public polls at the time showed Trump trailing in key states such as Texas, Michigan and Pennsylvania.[210][211][212] Days later, the Trump campaign severed ties with some of its internal pollsters.[213] Trump also said that "something weird" is happening at Fox News after their poll also showed him losing to several Democratic candidates.[214]

On June 12, 2019, during an interview with ABC News, Trump said that were a foreign country to offer damaging information on a political opponent, his reaction would be: "I think I'd want to hear it ... There's nothing wrong with listening." Trump also said the "FBI director is wrong" about the need to inform the FBI about a foreign government attempting to influence an election.[215][216][217] Trump initially claimed his comments were mischaracterized, prompting ABC News to release a transcript.[217] On June 13, Federal Election Commission chairwoman Ellen Weintraub stated: "It is illegal for any person to solicit, accept, or receive anything of value from a foreign national in connection with a U.S. election."[218] On June 14, Trump told Fox News: "If I don't hear what it is, you're not going to know what is ... Now, if I thought anything was incorrect or badly stated, I'd report it to the Attorney General, the FBI."[217]

A joint report published in June 2019 by the Center for Public Integrity, NBC News and CNBC detailed that the 2016 and 2020 Trump campaigns have yet to pay bills totaling over $800,000 to ten city governments for costs incurred to ensure public safety concerning Trump campaign rallies. The rallies took place from January 2016 to August 2016, and from September 2018 to February 2019.[219]

On June 18, Trump officially launched his re-election campaign at a rally at the Amway Center in Orlando, Florida.[220]

On June 21, writer E. Jean Carroll alleged via New York magazine that Trump raped her in a department store dressing room in 1995 or 1996. Two friends of Carroll confirmed to New York that Carroll had previously confided in them regarding the incident. Trump denied ever meeting Carroll, although New York had published a photo of Trump and Carroll together in 1987.[221][222][223]

On June 24, Trump and the GOP launched WinRed, a centralized small-dollar fundraising platform designed to compete with Democrats' ActBlue.[224][225]

July 2019 edit

At a campaign rally on July 17 in North Carolina, Trump criticized four Democratic congresswomen (Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ayanna Pressley, Ilhan Omar, and Rashida Tlaib), stating: "They never have anything good to say. That's why I say, 'Hey if you don't like it, let 'em leave' ... if they don't love it, tell them to leave it."[226][227] Trump said this in spite of his own history of criticizing previous United States administrations and policies, including his 2016 campaign slogan "Make America Great Again" indirectly asserting America was no longer "great", and his first presidential speech decrying "American carnage".[228][229] In his speech, Trump referenced Tlaib: "that's not somebody that loves our country."[230] Trump also named Omar and continued that Omar "looks down with contempt" on Americans, the crowd of Trump supporters reacted by chanting 'send her back!'[231][232] After the rally, Trump tweeted: "What a crowd, and what great people." Asked about the chants on July 18, Trump said he disagreed with the chants, and claimed he had tried to stop them by "speaking very quickly".

August 2019 edit

At an August 1 campaign rally in Cincinnati, Ohio, Trump declared: "We will be ending the AIDS epidemic shortly in America, and curing childhood cancer very shortly." This echoed his earlier comments during the June 2019 Orlando, Florida rally, when Trump pledged: "we will come up with the cures to many, many problems, to many, many diseases – including cancer."[233] Despite attacking four Democratic congresswomen as being too critical of America, Trump continued a recent trend of criticizing major American cities; at the rally, Trump singled out the cities of San Francisco, Los Angeles and Chicago. Trump said that Democrats governing liberal cities "deliver poverty for their constituents and privilege for themselves", with federal funding becoming "stolen money and it's wasted money". He also blamed protesters interrupting his rally on the premise that Cincinnati "must have a Democrat mayor". Trump highlighted Baltimore having a higher homicide rate (55.8 of 100,000 people) than the country Afghanistan, although he did not propose a policy to address the issue.[234][235]

On August 7, following the 2019 Dayton shooting and the 2019 El Paso shooting, Trump visited Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas. That day, Trump fired back at Democratic presidential candidates Beto O'Rourke ("be quiet") and Joe Biden ("boring") who had previously criticized him.[236][237] Trump additionally labeled Democratic presidential candidate Julian Castro as a "fool" and "not much" of a man.[238] While talking to medical staff at El Paso, Trump mentioned that his February 2019 campaign rally in the city had drawn a much bigger crowd than O'Rourke's campaign rally that same day. A campaign-style video of Trump shaking hands and posing for photos during the visit was released by the White House.[239]

September 2019 edit

On September 11, Trump tweeted that he has not "even started campaigning yet".[240] As the Trump–Ukraine scandal emerged and Trump faced an impeachment inquiry, the Trump campaign launched a $10 million television and web campaign with a video claiming Joe Biden had offered Ukraine $1 billion if they fired a prosecutor who was "investigating his son's company", including video of Biden boasting that the prosecutor had been fired.[241] Hunter Biden served on the board of directors of Burisma Holdings, the owner of which was investigated, but Biden himself was not investigated. Then-vice president Biden had in March 2016 threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees if Ukraine did not fire the prosecutor, Viktor Shokin. The Obama administration and other governments and non-governmental organizations were concerned that Shokin was not adequately pursuing corruption in Ukraine, was protecting the political elite, and was regarded as "an obstacle to anti-corruption efforts". In particular, he was seen to be slow walking the Burisma investigation.[242][243] The ad asserted that Trump had acted to fight corruption and Democrats were impeaching him for it. No evidence has surfaced of any malfeasance by the Bidens.[244]

Previously, in sworn testimony, the administration officials said Giuliani directly conveyed the president's demands to them that Ukraine launch investigations into the son of former Vice President Joe Biden and a long-debunked 2016 election-related conspiracy. However, Trump later denied sending Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine to push Biden.[245]

October–December 2019 edit

As the impeachment investigation continued, the campaign spent copious amounts of money defending the president against it.[246][247]

Prior to December 12, three lawsuits claimed Trump's business dealings have been violating the Constitution. All these cases advanced to critical stages in federal courts.[248] On the night of December 18, coinciding with the vote to impeach him, Trump held a rally in Battle Creek, Michigan. He received criticism for suggesting the deceased representative John Dingell may have gone to hell.[249]

The Associated Press acquired a recording of senior Trump campaign advisor Justin Clark telling Wisconsin Republicans that "traditionally it's always been Republicans suppressing votes in places" and 2020 would be the time to "start playing offense a little bit" to protect their voters. Clark asserted to the AP that he was speaking about how "Republicans historically have been falsely accused of voter suppression."[250]

In October, the Trump campaign ran a Facebook ad that falsely claimed Joe Biden offered to bribe Ukrainian officials to not investigate his son, Hunter Biden.[251]

2020 campaign developments edit

January 2020 edit

The impeachment trial began on January 16.[252]

  • January 9: First campaign rally of 2020 was held at the 8,000 seat Huntington Center in Toldeo, OH.[253]
  • January 14: Monster Rally in Green Bay, WI[254]
  • January 28: Monster Rally in Wildwood, NJ[255]
  • January 30: Monster Rally at Drake University's Knapp Center in Des Moines, IA[256]
  • January 31: The Kansas state convention began, being the second official event of the Republican race.

February 2020 edit

  • February 1: At the Kansas state convention, the entire selection process took place, culminating with the official binding of the delegation to Trump, giving him his second state.
  • February 2: The Iowa caucuses: the President received 31,464 (97.1%) of the vote.[257]
  • February 10: Monster Rally at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, NH[258]
  • February 13: In the New Hampshire primary, the President received 129,461 (85.7%) of the votes cast.[259]
  • February 22: The Nevada state committee awarded all of its delegates to President Trump.[260]

March 2020 edit

  • March 3: Super Tuesday. With over 60% of delegates selected by this date, the race for the nomination formally ended.
  • March 5: Facebook removed Trump campaign ads directing users to participate in an "Official 2020 Congressional District Census" on what was actually a campaign fundraising site.[261]

April 2020 edit

  • April 23: The Trump campaign released a new app which offers rewards for sharing Trump's tweets.[262]
  • Late April: Trump scolded campaign manager Brad Parscale after data from two polls, one from the Trump's own campaign and one from the Republican National Committee, showed Trump losing to Joe Biden in swing states, reported The Washington Post and CNN. At one point, Trump said he may sue Parscale, although it is unclear whether he was joking. Both Trump and Parscale denied that Trump had shouted. Parscale did not deny a conflict, and he did not deny Trump saying he may sue. Trump told the media he does not "believe the polls".[263][264]

May 2020 edit

  • May 4: CNN sent a cease-and-desist letter to the Trump campaign regarding its ad, "American Comeback", which had begun running the previous evening on cable television.[265] The ad selected words from a CNN interview and inserted them into a different context, making it a clear example of "deceptive editing", The Washington Post explained.[266]

June 2020 edit

  • June 8: After a CNN poll found Trump 14 percentage points behind Joe Biden, Trump on Twitter declared the poll "FAKE", saying he had "retained highly respected pollster, McLaughlin & Associates", to analyze that poll. The Republican Party's congressional campaign arm has advised Republicans to avoid employing McLaughlin & Associates after it predicted in 2014 that Republican Representative Eric Cantor would win re-election in a Republican primary by 34 points, but Cantor actually lost by around 10 points. Later in 2018, McLaughlin & Associates predicted that Republican Representative Rob Woodall would win re-election by 27 points, but Woodall ended up winning by only 0.2 points.[267]
  • June 9: The Trump campaign sent a cease-and-desist letter to CNN over their poll, demanding a retraction and apology. CNN refused.[268] During June, Trump also suggested he might sue campaign manager Brad Parscale for presenting polling data showing the president trailing in several key states. The New York Times describes this incident as a jest, rather than a serious threat, and participants in the call say Parscale responded to the threat by saying, "I love you, too."[269]
  • June 10: Amid the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the Trump campaign said the president would resume his campaign rallies, the first being at Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 19.[270] Ticketholders must "assume all risks related to exposure to COVID-19", and cannot hold the Trump campaign liable for resultant illness or injury.[271] The rally was later pushed back by one day to June 20, out of respect for the original date falling on Juneteenth (which was deemed insensitive due to the Tulsa race massacre and the ongoing George Floyd protests).[272]
  • June 12: The RNC decided not to write a new platform for 2020, reusing 2016's, which denounces the "current president".[273]
  • June 15: In a tweet, then-campaign manager Brad Parscale indicated that ticket requests for the June 20 rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, had surpassed a million.[274][275]
  • June 20: Trump held his first campaign rally in months at the BOK Center in Tulsa. The seating capacity of the arena is 19,199,[276] and in the days leading up to the event, Parscale said more than 800,000 people had registered for the rally.[277] Attendance at the rally was estimated to be just under 6,200, according to the Tulsa Fire Department.[278] The numbers projected by the campaign were inaccurate partially due to TikTok users and K-pop fans registering for the rally and not attending.[279][280] Trump spent 14 minutes (around 1/8th of the length of his speech) talking about walking hesitatingly down a ramp at the United States Military Academy, and the media coverage regarding the slowness of his descent.[281][282]
  • June 23: President Trump holds rallies in Phoenix and Yuma, Arizona.[283][284]

July 2020 edit

Celebrating Independence Day with an address at Mount Rushmore, Trump said he was in a battle against a "new far-left fascism". The New York Times characterized Trump as using the address "to mount a full-on culture war against a straw-man version of the left that he portrayed as inciting mayhem and moving the country toward totalitarianism". The Washington Post reported that while "amplifying racism and stoking culture wars have been mainstays of Trump's public identity for decades, they have been particularly pronounced this summer as the president has reacted to the national reckoning over systemic discrimination by seeking to weaponize the anger and resentment of some white Americans for his own political gain."[285][286]

On the evening of July 4, musician and entrepreneur Kanye West announced his campaign for the presidency. Los Angeles Times reported that "It's unclear whether West has filed any of the necessary paperwork to formally join the race between incumbent Donald Trump – for whom West has expressed admiration," and said this "might be part of an effort to draw Black supporters away from Biden to help Trump."[287]

Vice President Pence and White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany claimed that Joe Biden had asserted police had "become the enemy". Biden's words were taken out of context, as he had actually said the use of military-grade heavy equipment by police officers can look like "the military invading" communities and thus makes police "become the enemy" in the perception of some in the community.[288] According to Media Matters, Trump surrogate Sean Hannity also misrepresented Biden's words to his radio and television audiences at least 17 times in July.[289]

On July 10, the Trump campaign postponed a rally planned for the next day in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, with Tim Murtaugh, the campaign's communications director citing "safety reasons because of Tropical Storm Fay".[290] On July 15, Trump announced that he had promoted former deputy campaign manager Bill Stepien to campaign manager, replacing Brad Parscale.[291][292]

On July 19, in an interview aired on Fox News, Trump called the network's poll showing Biden leading by 8% "fake", further saying he would "have to see" if he would accept a loss in the election, citing postal voting as a way it would be rigged against him.[293] According to CNN, "There is no credible evidence that mail-in voting is rife with corruption,"[294] and "the concerted push by Trump to delegitimize mail-in ballots is raising alarm bells among Republican operatives, who are worried the President's demand for in-person voting will mainly serve to dampen turnout among his own supporters."[295][b]

During the first half of July, the campaign ran a television ad more than a thousand times targeted at women in Ohio, falsely asserting that Joe Biden proposes to "defund the police", which would increase home invasions and rapes, concluding that "You won't be safe in Joe Biden's America." Trump won Ohio by eight points in 2016 but polls showed he was in a statistical tie with Biden in July.[298] Across numerous other states, Trump ran another ad falsely accusing Biden of proposing to defund the police, with a simulated 9-1-1 call response:

You have reached the 9-1-1 police emergency line. Due to the defunding of the police department, we're sorry but no one is here to take your call. If you are calling to report a rape, please press one. To report a murder, press two. To report a home invasion, press three. For all other crimes, leave your name and number and someone will get back to you. Our estimated wait time is currently five days. Goodbye.[299]

In June and July, the campaign spent over $2 million on Facebook ads. One claims (with 308 variations) that "Dangerous MOBS of far-left groups are running through our streets and causing absolute mayhem. They are DESTROYING our cities and rioting."[300] In July, television ads were aired intending to portray the violent turmoil of a future Biden presidency – utilizing images of turmoil occurring during Trump's presidency.[301][300]

In mid-July, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Institute formally asked the Trump campaign and Republican National Committee to stop using Reagan's name and likeness for fundraising. The request came after a campaign email solicitation offered commemorative coins with images of Trump and Reagan.[302]

On July 23, Trump announced the cancellation of the Jacksonville portion of the 2020 Republican National Convention, citing rising COVID-19 numbers.[303] On July 30, he publicly suggested delaying the election due to COVID-19, despite the authority to make such a change lying with Congress.[304] Some of the most prominent leaders of the Republican Party rejected that such a prospect would be considered.[305] Later the same day, Trump walked back his comments, while repeating his condemnation of postal voting.[294][b] Responding to the comments and the president's handling of the pandemic, Timothy Egan writes in a New York Times opinion piece that Trump "should do humanity a favor and surrender now", saying this could "save many lives of supporters who have listened to the lethal quackery from the presidential podium".[306] According to multiple high-ranking Republicans, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has signaled to Republican Senate candidates that they may distance themselves from Trump if they feel it will help them salvage their own campaigns.[307]

At the end of July, the Trump campaign temporarily halted television advertising to reassess its messaging strategy. A campaign official attributed the pause to the recent change in campaign leadership, stating, "We'll be back on the air shortly, even more forcefully exposing Joe Biden as a puppet of the radical left-wing." The campaign had $146.6 million budgeted for television and radio ads from Labor Day until November.[308] Television advertising was expected to resume on August 3, with a focus on states that will vote the earliest;[309] a new campaign ad features altered images to falsely portray Biden as "alone" and "hiding" in his basement.[310][311]

August 2020 edit

On August 5, Trump announced that he was considering hosting his GOP convention acceptance speech from the White House, saying "It would be the easiest from the standpoint of security." Fox News reported public criticism of the announcement, including from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and cited the Hatch Act of 1939, which prohibits executive-branch federal employees other than the president and vice president from engaging in partisan political activity.[312][c] On August 6, it was reported that the Commission on Presidential Debates had rejected the campaign's request to move or add a debate to early September, before states begin early voting. The first debate is scheduled for September 29.[314]

On August 14, Trump gathered about 300 police officers who support him at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, and asked the crowd whether "Sleepy Joe" or "Slow Joe" was a better nickname for his opponent. The former name, which Trump has frequently used, provoked a louder response. He stated that "Putin and Kim Jong-un and President Xi of China, they're not sleepy. We can't have slow, sleepy people dealing with them."[315] On August 17, Miles Taylor, former chief of staff to former Department of Homeland Security (DHS) secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, published an op-ed in The Washington Post and featured in an ad from Republican Voters Against Trump. In the ad, Taylor says, "What we saw [over] 2 1/2 years in that administration, was terrifying." He says that when the DHS raised national security concerns, Trump "wasn't interested in those things," and attempted to exploit the department "for his own political purposes and to fuel his own agenda," including by withholding federal wildfire aid to California because he lacked support in the state. Taylor asserts that "Years of DHS planning for a pandemic threat have been largely wasted," and concludes: "Given what I experienced ... I have to support Joe Biden for president."[316]

On August 20, Trump said in Old Forge, Pennsylvania, that "Joe Biden is a puppet of the radical left movement that seeks to destroy the American way of life. They don't want energy, they don't want guns, they don't want religion." Later that day, Trump tweeted against Biden, the Obamas and mail-in voting.[317] The campaign also released a digital ad suggesting that Hunter Biden used his father's vice presidency to personally profit from a Chinese bank (which Hunter denied in 2019). That night, Biden accepted his party's presidential nomination at the 2020 Democratic National Convention.[318]

On August 22, The New York Times reported that Trump would speak on all four nights (only one night being customary) of the 2020 Republican National Convention scheduled for the next week, that nearly half of the keynote speakers would be Trump family members, and that two former producers of The Apprentice would be coordinating the event.[319] On August 23, Trump senior adviser Jason Miller stated that the campaign was "conserving money right now and focusing a little bit more smartly and a little more effectively on the states that are voting early," while Politico reports that "even in most of those early-voting states, Biden has dominated Trump" regarding television ad spending.[320] On the first night of the convention (which had less viewers than both the 2016 convention and the 2020 Democratic event),[321] Donald Trump Jr. said his father's policies had been "like rocket fuel to the economy ... especially to the middle class," while

Biden has promised to take that money back out of your pocket and keep it in the swamp. That makes sense though, considering Joe Biden is basically the Loch Ness Monster of the swamp. For the past half-century, he's been lurking around in there. He sticks his head up every now and then to run for president, and then he disappears and doesn't do much in between.[322]

On the second night of the Republican National Convention, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke from Jerusalem (where he was on state business), prompting an investigation by House Democrats to determine whether this violated the Hatch Act, which Pompeo had instructed federal employees to obey earlier in the year. The use of the convention to perform a naturalization ceremony[d] and reveal the presidential pardon of Jon Ponder also drew scrutiny for using government business to promote Trump's campaign.[324][325][326] On the final night of the convention, Trump stated:

Your vote will decide whether we protect law abiding Americans, or whether we give free rein to violent anarchists, agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens. And this election will decide whether we will defend the American way of life, or whether we allow a radical movement to completely dismantle and destroy it.[327]

On August 31, Trump asserted in an interview with Laura Ingraham that Biden is being controlled by "People that you've never heard of, people that are in the dark shadows." When the program host said this sounded like the promotion of a conspiracy theory, Trump elaborated that "They're people that are on the streets, they're people that are controlling the streets." He further claimed that someone "from a certain city" boarded a plane which was "almost completely loaded with thugs [around seven in total] wearing these dark uniforms, black uniforms with gear and this and that," to come to the Republican National Convention "to do big damage."[e] Then, prompted by Ingraham to discuss how Biden's campaign was being financed, he said, "The money is coming from some very stupid rich people who have no idea that if their thing ever succeeded, which it won't, they will be thrown to the wolves like you've never seen before."[328]

In late August, the Trump campaign shared a video featuring the soundbite of Joe Biden saying: "You won't be safe in Joe Biden's America." The quote was taken wholly out of context, as Biden was instead attributing this quote to "Trump and Pence", while Biden was stating that images of violence were actually that of "Donald Trump's America today". Meanwhile, White House social media director Dan Scavino shared a fake video purportedly showing Biden sleeping during a live interview. In fact, the fake video combined two different clips: one of Biden looking down with eyes half-closed, and one of an interviewer asking activist Harry Belafonte to "wake up". The fake video also had new audio added, of snoring sounds.[329]

September 2020 edit

On September 2, Trump told WECT-TV in Wilmington, North Carolina, that people should vote twice—once in person and again by mail—to see if anyone stops them from committing this illegal act. When CNN asked U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr for his input, Barr claimed he did not know whether it was illegal to vote twice.[330] Barr also told CNN that he believed that China was the biggest active threat to U.S. election security (contradicting U.S. intelligence, which had identified Russia) and that foreign adversaries would likely sow the system with fraudulent mail-in ballots (although he admitted he had no evidence of this).[331]

On September 3, Trump spoke in Pennsylvania. He encouraged voters to vote in person, referencing potential mail fraud or ballots going missing. He also focused on topics of the economy and public safety in light of mass protests and riots.[332] He attacked Biden for mixed messages on fracking and for wearing a mask so much during the COVID-19 pandemic.[333][332]

The New York Times reported on September 5 that the Trump campaign had spent $58 million of donor money on legal bills, far exceeding the levels of his predecessors at similar points in their campaigns. The spending included routine matters, and legal work involving the Russia investigation and his impeachment, as well as relating to enforcement of nondisclosure agreements with former associates and his personal business interests.[334]

On September 7, The New York Times reported the campaign might be facing a cash crunch, having spent more than $800 million of the $1.1 billion raised from early 2019 through July. The Times reported the campaign had engaged in profligate spending until the new campaign manager Bill Stepien imposed controls. The next day, Trump stated he was prepared to spend his own money if necessary.[335][336]

From September 8–12, the Trump campaign released a "Support Our Troops" advertisement with a picture of silhouetted Russian Mikoyan MiG-29 fighter jets and soldiers carrying at least one Russian AK-74 assault rifle, that drew international commentary.[337][338]

On September 10, The Washington Post reported that campaign manager Bill Stepien had already reduced spending on television ads. "Between Aug. 10 and Sept. 7, Biden's campaign spent about $90 million on television ads, more than four times the $18 million spent by the Trump campaign," the reporters said.[339][340][341]

On September 13, Trump held a rally in Henderson, Nevada. Due to the pandemic, it was his first indoor rally since the Tulsa rally in June, and it violated Nevada's prohibition against gatherings of more than 50 people.[342][343][344]

The Associated Press reported on September 14 that, although the Trump campaign had spent heavily for months, it did not seem to have hurt Biden in the polls, and the Trump campaign no longer could count on having more cash than the Biden campaign. Biden, while achieving record-breaking fundraising in August, outspent Trump by nearly double that same month. Meanwhile, the Trump campaign canceled advertising in several states, while retaining $200 million worth of reserved ads, characterizing the cancellations as strategic.[345]

Trump held a rally on September 18 in Bemidji, Minnesota. Afterward 16 COVID-19 cases were traced to the rally and four more to a protest held just outside.[346]

On September 23, Trump was asked if he would commit to a peaceful transition of power if he lost the 2020 election, to which he replied: "Well, we'll have to see what happens." He also said at a press briefing, "I've been complaining very strongly about the ballots. And the ballots are a disaster. Get rid of the ballots and you'll have a very peaceful — there won't be a transfer, frankly. There will be a continuation."[347] That same day, he said it was important to confirm his incoming Supreme Court nominee promptly because he believed the election outcome would be determined by the Supreme Court and he needed a majority to overcome "this scam that the Democrats are pulling."[348] Also that day, Donald Trump Jr. asserted in social media posts that "The radical left are laying the groundwork to steal this election from my father," adding, "Their plan is to add millions of fraudulent ballots that can cancel your vote and overturn the election," asking "able-bodied" people to join an election security "army" for his father.[349]

On September 23, Eric Trump shared a video on Twitter, showing Joe Biden looking away from the camera during an interview with Telemundo. Eric Trump used this to falsely claim that Biden was using a teleprompter. This was re-shared by Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller, and then Trump himself. In actuality, Biden was looking away from the camera because there was a monitor off-screen where Telemundo viewers were shown asking Biden questions. Biden was replying to one such viewer directly.[350]

Meanwhile, the Trump campaign ran video and pictorial advertisements on Facebook, YouTube, and Google, which falsely claimed that Joe Biden used a teleprompter during an April 2020 interview with James Corden. A teleprompter was seen on Biden's screen during that interview, but that was in fact Corden's teleprompter, not Biden's. The teleprompter was shared on the screens of Corden's interviewees via Zoom. The Trump campaign used the advertisement to claim that Biden "can't handle an interview", "can't handle presidency".[351] Another deceptive advertisement ran by the Trump campaign claimed that "Joe Biden completely botches the Pledge of Allegiance", as Biden had paraphrased the Pledge. However, Biden's words were taken out of context, as Biden was not trying to legitimately recite the Pledge; rather, he was referencing specific parts of it while he argued that he would govern as president for all states, instead of only Democratic-controlled states.[352]

Trump's support among seniors weakened significantly going into the final weeks of the campaign.[353] On September 24 he announced he was sending $200 drug discount cards to 33 million Medicare recipients, at a cost approaching $7 billion.[354]

On September 25, Trump unveiled his "Platinum Plan for Black America", promising $500 billion in capital access, as well as "creating 3 million new jobs, and bridging historic disparities in health care and education" and making Juneteenth a national holiday.[355]

On September 29, the candidates participated in a first debate in Cleveland. The event was characterized by Trump frequently interrupting both Biden and moderator Chris Wallace. This prompted the debate commission to announce that microphones would be cut off at the next debate if the rules are broken by either candidate.[356]

On September 30, three cases of COVID-19 were traced to a Trump rally held in Duluth, Minnesota.[346]

Musician Eddy Grant's copyright infringement lawsuit edit

In September 2020, musician Eddy Grant sued Trump for unauthorized use of Grant's 1983 chart hit Electric Avenue (song) in an August 2020 presidential campaign video. Trump posted the video on Twitter where it was viewed more than 13 million times before Twitter took it down after Grant's copyright complaint. Grant's song plays during 40 seconds of the animated 55-second video.[357][358][359] Trump unsuccessfully attempted to have the suit dismissed, citing fair use and "absolute presidential immunity".[360][361][362] Grant asked for $300,000 in damages.[361] Trump's attorney told the court that the deposition contained sensitive information about Trump's presidential campaign strategy. He asked that Trump and campaign advisor Dan Scavino's testimony be permanently sealed because it would give an "unwarranted competitive advantage" to his opponents in the 2024 presidential election, and because it "could be used against them in other, parallel, litigations unrelated to this matter.".[363] The case, Grant v. Trump (1:20-cv-07103), is pending in federal court in the Southern District New York.[364]

October 2020 edit

On October 2, two hours after it was announced that White House senior advisor Hope Hicks had tested positive for COVID-19,[365][366] Trump tweeted that both he and First Lady Melania Trump had tested positive as well and would immediately go into quarantine.[367] As a result, they cancelled all in-person campaign events scheduled in the coming days, including a rally in Orlando-Sanford International Airport.[368] Several other White House members and associates tested positive for the virus, including Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien.[369]

The Trump campaign ran Facebook advertisements featuring fake photos altered to show Joe Biden wearing an earpiece. The advertisements included captions including: "Who is in Joe's ear?", and that Biden "declined an earpiece inspection" at the debate. Asked to comment on the advertisements, the Trump campaign claimed that they were "obvious satire".[370]

On October 7, Vice President Pence participated in a debate with Senator Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate for vice president on the Biden ticket, that was held by USA Today and moderated by Susan Page, the Washington bureau chief of the newspaper.[371]

Trailing in polls during the month leading to the election, Trump became increasingly insistent that his political adversaries be indicted, including Biden, former president Obama and Hillary Clinton, and that documents be declassified and released, including Clinton's emails.[372][373]

Six weeks after the Republican convention, the Trump campaign canceled all television and radio advertising in Ohio, Iowa and New Hampshire, and substantially reduced advertising in four other states.[374]

On October 15, Biden and Trump hosted separate town hall speeches, in lieu of a second debate.[375]

 
Trump at a rally in Omaha, Nebraska, on October 27

On October 22, the candidates participated in a second and final debate in Nashville. In contrast to the first debate, the microphones of both candidates were muted at select times.[376] Trump pressed Biden on renewed allegations that during his time as vice president, members of his family had personally profited from his position in Ukraine and China, to which Biden pointed out Trump's own scandals regarding those countries.[377] Trump repeatedly asked why Biden had not delivered on his 2020 campaign promises during his eight years in the White House, to which Biden responded, "we had a Republican Congress."[378]

On October 26, the Minnesota Department of Health linked 23 COVID-19 cases to three Trump rallies held in the state in September. According to Johns Hopkins University, the average number of new cases in Beltrami County, where Trump's rally in Bemidji was held, was 2.85 new cases a day but had risen to 14.57 new cases per day four weeks after the rally. Minnesota traced one case each to a September 18 Joe Biden rally and an event on October 1 in Becker that was attended by Eric Trump.[379] A campaign rally by Vice President Mike Pence in Hibbing in late October had "more than 650 people in attendance, exceeding Minnesota health guidelines to restrict crowds to 250 people." At least five aides to Pence, including his chief of staff Marc Short, had tested positive only two days earlier. National Security Advisor Robert O'Brien called Pence "an essential worker" who needed to be out campaigning.[380]

Election Day and beyond edit

Early on November 4, despite the fact that no clear winner of the election had been determined, Trump declared victory from the White House, stating that he "did win the election". At that point, results from states such as Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan and Georgia were unclear.[381] Although Trump was leading in the vote count of those states at the time, experts believed that many of the still-uncounted votes—which included votes from large cities and mail-in ballots—would turn out to favor Biden.[382]

On November 5, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit by the Trump campaign to stop vote-counting in Pennsylvania. The Trump campaign had alleged that its observers were not given access to observe the vote, but during the hearing, its lawyers admitted that its observers were already present in the vote-counting room.[383] Also that day, a state judge dismissed another lawsuit by the Trump campaign that alleged that in Georgia, late-arriving ballots were counted. The judge ruled that no evidence had been produced that the ballots were late.[384] Meanwhile, in Michigan, a state judge dismissed the Trump's campaign's lawsuit requesting a pause in vote-counting to allow access to observers, as the judge noted that vote-counting had already finished in Michigan.[385] That judge also noted that the official complaint did not state "why", "when, where, or by whom" an election observer was allegedly blocked from observing ballot-counting in Michigan.[386]

On November 5, the Trump Victory in Wisconsin group declared it would be "chasing our absentee ballots over in Pennsylvania" for people who had yet to vote. Also, that day, the Kenosha for Trump group sent an email urging "volunteers to make phone calls to Pennsylvania Trump supporters to return their absentee ballots". However, votes had to be postmarked by November 3 to count as legal votes in Pennsylvania, and Trump himself has described late votes as election fraud.[387]

By November 6, a growing number of Trump officials had admitted that the incumbent's loss was probable.[388] On that day, election-calling organization Decision Desk HQ forecast that Trump had lost the election to Biden.[389]

By November 7, news organizations ABC News, Associated Press, CBS News, CNN, Fox News, NBC News, Reuters, and the New York Times forecast that Trump had lost the election to Biden.[390]

Still, the president refused to concede. The administrator of the GSA, Emily W. Murphy, refused to authorize transition funds until November 23.[391][392] Most Senate Republicans, including Mitch McConnell, claimed that the election was still unsettled,[393] and Attorney General William Barr authorized the Justice Department to investigate alleged "massive voter fraud," prompting Assistant AG Richard Pilger, director of the elections crimes branch in the Justice Department's Public Integrity Section, to resign in protest.[394]

Reliable sources indicated that there were plans to resume full-scale campaigning in conjunction with recounts in Arizona, Georgia, and Wisconsin.[395][396] On the week of November 9, Trump indicated to Kevin Cramer that "If this doesn't work out, I'll just run again in four years."[397]

As repeated lawsuits failed throughout November, Trump admitted to Fox News on November 29 that "it's very hard to get a case to the Supreme Court."[398] In an interview with the Associated Press published December 1, Attorney General William Barr acknowledged: "To date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have affected a different outcome in the election."[399] By January, Trump had lost 60 lawsuits.[400]

On January 2, 2021, during an hour-long conference call, Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to change the state's vote totals by the 11,780 votes he needed to win the state. During the call, Trump falsely suggested that Raffensperger could have committed a criminal offense. On January 11, the phone call was cited in a new article of impeachment introduced in the House of Representatives.[401]

 
Sign with Pence removed after Pence fell out of favor
 
Sign for 2020 updated for 2024

Self-declared "alternate electors" voted in protest; these votes had no legal validity.[402] Well over a hundred Republican representatives promised to contest the counting ceremony at the U.S. Capitol on January 6.[403][404] Experts debated whether Trump was trying to perform a self-coup.[405][406]

On January 6, 2021, Trump spoke at a "March to Save America" rally on the Ellipse, where he encouraged the crowd to "fight like hell" and said he would be marching with them to the United States Capitol, although he did not join them in the end. The rioters broke into the Senate Chamber where the electoral college ballots were being counted, causing both the House and Senate to be evacuated. Five people died from the events, while dozens more were injured, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation opened over 170 investigations into the events.

Polling edit

Opinion polls conducted in 2020 almost always showed Democratic nominee Joe Biden leading Trump nationally in general election matchups, with the former vice president's advantage usually extending beyond the margin of sampling error.[407][408][409] The Trump campaign dismissed polls throughout the election season, noting how they erroneously predicted a Hillary Clinton victory in the 2016 presidential election.[410][411][412] The sentiment has reflected a greater public distrust of polls in general, with several studies including one by the Pew Research Center showing that even when Biden lead Trump by a significant margin nationally, a majority of people still believed that Trump would win the election.[413]

After keeping pace with Biden and even leading him in some key states throughout the spring, Trump's approval rating significantly weakened in June and July, causing him to fall behind in most of those battleground states as well as states that historically vote Republican such as Georgia, Texas and Kansas.[71][72][73] By July 4, 2020, Politico reported that Trump was "trailing [Biden] by double digits in recent polls".[414] A mid-July Washington Post/ABC News poll showed Biden's double-digit lead holding.[415]

Trump however began to bounce back in early August. A national poll conducted then showed Biden leading by just three percent nationally.[416] Trump also began to improve in state polls, such as in Iowa, where a poll showed Trump leading Biden by 48% to 45%, six percentage points less than Trump won the state with in 2016, but an improvement from where Trump's popularity was in the few months prior.[417] Internal polls commissioned by the campaign showed Trump tied with or ahead of Biden in 17 key states,[418] while a CNN poll showed Biden up by just one percentage point in 15 battleground states.[419] Towards the end of the month though, Biden's advantage began to grow again, as Trump found himself down several points nationally in three highly rated polls: Fox News who had Biden leading 49% to 42%,[420] the NBC/Wall Street Journal who had Biden leading 50% to 41%,[421] and The Washington Post/ABC News who had Biden up 53% to 41%.[422]

Trump got a slight bounce following the 2020 Republican National Convention, after which a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed Biden's national lead reduced to seven points.[413] By the end of August, Trump was polling ahead of Biden in key states such as Ohio where he led 50% to 45%, and was polling neck-and-neck with the Democratic candidate in other battleground states such as Florida.[423][424]

Trump's national polling numbers fell heavily again following his performance at the first presidential debate and his COVID-19 diagnosis at the end of September and beginning of October, as Biden's lead returned to double digits regularly. A Washington Post/ABC News poll taken around this period showed Biden's lead to be 53% to 43%.[425] Trump however still managed to keep pace with Biden in the battleground states, thus giving him an outside chance of retaining the Presidency via the Electoral College as Election Day approached.

Finances edit

Trump began fundraising for his reelection campaign immediately after his inauguration, whereas his predecessors had waited years to do this.[161] By September 2020, Trump's 2020 reelection effort, including the Republican National Committee, had spent over $800 million. At that time, Trump had not yet contributed any of his own money to his reelection effort, although he was reportedly considering contributing $100 million. (He had, by contrast, contributed $66 million of his own money to his 2016 campaign.) Bloomberg News said, "it would be unprecedented for an incumbent president to put his own money toward winning a second term."[426][427]

Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. quarterly financial summaries
Quarter Cash on hand
at beginning
Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand
at end
Debts owed
to campaign
Debts owed
by campaign
2017 Q1[428] 7,611,702.92 7,120,150.93 6,370,250.57 8,361,603.28 0.00 0.00
2017 Q2[429] 8,361,603.28 7,954,888.84 4,369,374.54 11,947,117.58 0.00 0.00
2017 Q3[430] 11,947,117.58 10,129,336.13 4,071,599.06 18,004,854.65 0.00 0.00
2017 Q4[431] 18,004,854.65 6,895,755.62 2,791,451.84 22,109,158.43 0.00 0.00
2018 Q1[432] 22,109,158.43 10,106,775.80 3,876,088.55 28,339,845.68 0.00 0.00
2018 Q2[433] 28,339,845.68 8,368,358.11 3,621,333.93 33,086,869.86 0.00 0.00
2018 Q3[434] 33,086,869.86 10,026,045.24 7,705,411.15 35,407,503.95 0.00 0.00
2018 Q4[435] 35,407,503.95 6,946,974.43 23,061,577.18 19,292,901.20 0.00 1,035,597.65
Total 2017–2018[436] 7,611,702.92 67,548,285.10 55,867,086.82 19,292,901.20 0.00 1,035,597.65
2019 Q1[437] 19,292,901.20 30,304,180.03 8,834,888.53 40,762,192.70 0.00 528,116.26
2019 Q2[438] 40,762,192.70 26,516,845.63 10,541,672.69 56,737,365.64 0.00 294,070.29
2019 Q3[439] 56,737,365.64 40,958,012.84 14,479,108.22 83,216,270.26 0.00 216,915.00
2019 Q4[440] 83,216,270.26 45,980,113.53 26,410,679.60 102,785,704.19 0.00 170,377.55
2020 Q1[441][442][443] 102,785,704.19 34,258,184.38 38,573,302.28 98,470,586.29 0.00 234,670.08
Grand total 7,611,702.92 245,565,621.50 154,706,738.14 98,470,586.29 0.00 234,670.08

Funding pace edit

 
Logo of the Trump Make America Great Again Committee

At the end of the first quarter of 2017, the campaign's three committees ("Donald J. Trump for President", "Trump Victory", and "Trump Make America Great Again Committee") reported raising a combined $13.2 million, the majority of which had come from small donors.[99]

Trump's campaign and the Republican National Committee ultimately raised a combined $55 million in the first quarter. According to the National Review's Kelly Jane Torrance, Barack Obama and the Democratic National Committee had raised roughly $16 million in the same period of Obama's first term.[21]

On March 17, 2017, the campaign saw what its highest single-day contribution total was, with the campaign and its joint-fundraising-committee raising a combined total of $314,000.[444][445] By the end of May the RNC had raised more than $62 million in 2017. The RNC had already received more online donations than they had in the entire year of 2016.[148]

On April 14, 2019, the campaign announced that it had raised $30 million in the first quarter of 2019, far outpacing the campaigns of his individual Democratic opponents in the same period. Average donations were $34.26, and nearly 99 percent of donations to the campaign were $200 or less. In addition, the Republican National Committee brought in $45.8 million in first-quarter 2019.[446]

Notable expenditures and allegations of grifting edit

Trump properties edit

In June 2018, ProPublica reported that Trump Organization properties had received "at least $16.1 million...from his campaign, Republican organizations, and government agencies" since late 2015.[447] In October 2019, OpenSecrets found that total spending on Trump properties had increased to $16.8 million even when just considering payments made by the Trump campaign and other Republican political campaigns and PACs (leaving aside the government agencies).[448]

During the first three months of 2017, the Trump 2020 campaign reported spending $6.3 million, of which nearly $500,000 (over 6% of its spending) was to companies owned by Trump.[449] In the Trump 2020 campaign's first two years (2017 and 2018), it paid more than $890,000 in rent for space in Trump Tower,[450][451] while the Republican National Committee paid $225,000.[451] As of October 2020, the campaign's committees had directed more than $17.9 million of campaign donor money to Trump properties, while the Republican National Committee had paid $3.0 million.[452][453]

Legal and compliance work edit

In a period spanning 2015–2020, the Trump campaign (including its 2016 and 2020 versions) used at least $58.4 million of donor funds to pay for legal and compliance work. (This was more than 5 times what the Obama campaign and the Democratic National Committee had paid for legal and compliance work during an equivalent period eight years earlier.) Federal Election Commission filings do not reveal how much the Trump campaign spent on any specific case as contrasted with routine legal work.[454] To look at a narrower slice of this spending, in the third quarter of 2017, the Trump campaign spent $4.1 million (27% of its expenditures) on legal fees, including the personal legal expenses of Trump and his family.[455][456] By this point, 10% of the campaign's overall spending since the beginning of the year had been on legal fees.[456]

Advertisements edit

As of March 2019, Trump's campaign had spent almost twice as much on Facebook and Google ads as the entire Democratic field combined.[457]

Memorabilia edit

During the first three months of his presidency, his reelection campaign spent more than $4 million on memorabilia.[21]

Money funneled through Brad Parscale edit

Between January 2017 and March 2020, Trump's reelection committees paid $38.9 million to companies owned by Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale. In the analysis of Democratic political consultant James Carville, "They're all just fleecing the campaign ... Everybody is trying to take everything they can get on the way out."[458] Former GOP strategist and Lincoln Project activist Rick Wilson, noting that Parscale bought a Ferrari, a Land Rover, a waterfront house and a yacht, said the campaign's leaders "are taking Donald Trump to the cleaners".[459]

In April 2020, it was revealed that Brad Parscale was paying $180,000 per year to Kimberly Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr., and another $180,000 per year to Lara Trump, wife of Eric Trump. "It's donor money," said Paul Ryan, an expert on campaign finance with the watchdog group Common Cause. Parscale was paying these women through his company, not through the campaign or the party. "I can pay them however I want to pay them," Parscale told reporters. Two anonymous Republicans in the White House suggested that the payments were deliberately made this way, so the campaign did not have to report them. Stuart Stevens, a top aide in Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign, accused Parscale of being "a money launderer".[460]

Groups supporting Trump edit

The Republican Party edit

On January 23, 2019, the Republican National Committee, in a unanimous vote, informally endorsed the president.[195][196]

Super PACs edit

Super PACs supporting Trump's reelection campaign include Committee to Defend the President,[17] Great America PAC,[17] and Great America Committee.[461][462] The Great America PAC received donations from, among others, former racer Walker Evans[463] and Insperity executive Jay Mincks.[464] The Committee to Defend the President PAC received contributions from, among others, Enterprise Products executive Ralph S. Cunningham.[465]

The Center for Public Integrity published an analysis of 2017 first-quarter federal campaign spending records which revealed that two Super PACs supporting Trump, Great America PAC and Committee to Defend the President, had spent a combined $1.32 million on the 2020 election campaign.[17] Ted Harvey serves as the chairman of the Committee to Defend the President. Eric Beach and Ed Rollins serve as co-chairmen of Great America PAC.[17] Both PACs have previously been accused by the FEC of poorly maintaining financial records and had been threatened with penalties.[17] The Center for Public Integrity also found that several other pro-Trump PACs had already been founded in 2017, but most of them had yet to be very active. One such PAC was America First Action, which was founded by the CEO of a political consulting firm for which Trump's 2020 campaign treasurer is the senior vice president.[17]

On May 17, 2017, Mike Pence filed FEC paperwork to form Great America Committee, a PAC that would be headed by his former campaign staffers Nick Ayers and Marty Obst.[461][462] This is the first time in U.S. history a sitting vice president has founded such a political organization.[461]

On August 7, Marc Lotter, a spokesperson for Mike Pence, confirmed to MSNBC's Hallie Jackson that the vice president had hosted Republican donors, including mega-donors Charles and David Koch, at Number One Observatory Circle.[158]

At the end of the third quarter, the FEC calculated that in 2017 super PACS and other outside groups supporting Trump had spent more than $2 million.[466]

Amount spent by outside groups in support of campaign edit

Table displays the amount that groups have reported to the FEC they have spent in support of Trump's candidacy from January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2020.[467]

Group Amount
The Committee to Defend the President 13,977,787.95
Great America PAC 13,841,286.33
Other 31,416,965.73
Total 59,236,040.01

Other groups edit

In late January 2017, several members of Trump's 2016 campaign staff formed America First Policies, a pro-Trump political nonprofit. Those involved included former deputy campaign chairs Rick Gates and David Bossie. Brad Parscale[468] and Katrina Pierson were also involved. Additionally involved were Nick Ayers and Marty Obst, both of whom served as advisors to Mike Pence during the 2016 campaign.[469] Trump's former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Katie Walsh has also joined the organization.[121] Near the end of May, members of the organization (including Walsh) participated in meetings at the RNC's D.C. offices with members Trump's family to discuss campaign strategy.[121][122]

In 2017, Matt Braynard, a key member of Trump's 2016 campaign staff, established the organization Look Ahead America.[470] The organization took steps to target inactive voters in places such as New Hampshire,[470] a state Trump came close to winning in 2016.[470] Look Ahead America claimed it would not coordinate its efforts with the president.[470] In the week after the 2020 election, Braynard launched a group called The Voter Integrity Fund to review public records for indications of election malfeasance.[471] On December 1, 2020, he tweeted that Biden's election was illegitimate: "If the issues we raised are not resolved...[Biden] cannot be considered 'president' but [should] instead [be] referred to as the #presidentialoccupant." Trump retweeted Braynard's comment several hours later.[472]

In August 2018, a group called the 45 Alliance was formed. All three of the group's officers had served on Trump's transition team, and two of them also served in Trump's White House. During the calendar year in which the 45 Alliance was formed, it was entirely funded by Trump for America, a nonprofit that supported Trump's transition ($150,000); by America First Policies ($150,000); and by the Republican National Committee ($75,000). Neil Corkery is in charge of the 45 Alliance's finances. "He has ties to several high-profile dark money operations," Walker Davis wrote, "like the Wellspring Committee and Judicial Crisis Network. In 2018, an anonymous million-dollar contribution to President Trump's inauguration was linked to him."[473]

Black Voices for Trump was an initiative of the campaign which raised support for Donald Trump among African Americans.[474][475][476] In August 2023, Harrison Floyd, the executive director of Black Voices for Trump, was charged with three felonies as part of the prosecution of Donald Trump in Georgia.[477]

Rallies edit

2020 campaign rallies
Date of rally City State Venue Estimated attendance Source
Monday, February 11, 2019 El Paso TX El Paso County Coliseum 6,000 [478]
Thursday, March 28, 2019 Grand Rapids MI Van Andel Arena 14,000 [479]
Saturday, April 27, 2019 Green Bay WI Resch Center 10,000 [480]
Wednesday, May 8, 2019 Panama City Beach FL Aaron Bessant Park Amphitheater November 27, 2020, at the Wayback Machine 7,500 [481]
Monday, May 20, 2019 Montoursville PA Williamsport Regional Airport 15,000 [482]
Tuesday, June 18, 2019 Orlando FL Amway Center 20,000 [483]
Wednesday, July 17, 2019 Greenville NC Williams Arena 8,000 [484]
Thursday, August 1, 2019 Cincinnati OH U.S. Bank Arena 17,500 [485]
Thursday, August 15, 2019 Manchester NH SNHU Arena 11,000 [486]
Monday, September 9, 2019 Fayetteville NC Crown Expo Center 5,500 [487]
Monday, September 16, 2019 Rio Rancho NM Santa Ana Star Center 8,000 [488]
Thursday, October 10, 2019 Minneapolis MN Target Center 20,000 [489]
Thursday, October 17, 2019 Dallas TX American Airlines Center 21,000

[490]

Tuesday, November 26, 2019 Sunrise FL BB&T Center (Sunrise, Florida) 20,000 [491]
Tuesday, December 10, 2019 Hershey PA Giant Center 12,000 [492]
Wednesday, December 18, 2019 Battle Creek MI Kellogg Arena 5,400 [493]
Thursday, January 9, 2020 Toledo OH Huntington Center 8,000 [494]
Tuesday, January 14, 2020 Milwaukee WI UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena 12,000 [495]
Tuesday, January 28, 2020 Wildwood NJ Wildwoods Convention Center 7,500 [496]
Thursday, January 30, 2020 Des Moines IA Knapp Center 7,600 [497]
Monday, February 10, 2020 Manchester NH SNHU Arena 12,000 [498]
Wednesday, February 19, 2020 Phoenix AZ Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum 14,000 [499]
Thursday, February 20, 2020 Colorado Springs CO Broadmoor World Arena 8,500 [500]
Friday, February 21, 2020 Las Vegas NV Las Vegas Convention Center 15,000 [501]
Friday, February 28, 2020 North Charleston SC North Charleston Coliseum 13,000 [502]
Monday, March 2, 2020 Charlotte NC Bojangles' Coliseum 10,000 [503]
Saturday, June 20, 2020 Tulsa OK BOK Center 6,200 [504]
Tuesday, June 23, 2020 Phoenix AZ Dream City Church 3,000 [505]
Monday, August 17, 2020 Mankato MN Mankato Regional Airport [506]
Oshkosh WI Wittman Regional Airport [507]
Tuesday, August 18, 2020 Yuma AZ Yuma International Airport [508]
Thursday, August 20, 2020 Old Forge PA Mariotti Building Products [509]
Friday, August 28, 2020 Londonderry NH Manchester-Boston Regional Airport [510]
Thursday, September 3, 2020 Latrobe PA Arnold Palmer Regional Airport [511]
Tuesday, September 8, 2020 Winston-Salem NC Smith Reynolds Airport [512]
Thursday, September 10, 2020 Freeland MI MBS International Airport [513]
Saturday, September 12, 2020 Minden NV Minden–Tahoe Airport [514]
Sunday, September 13, 2020 Henderson Xtreme Manufacturing [515]
Thursday, September 17, 2020 Mosinee WI Central Wisconsin Airport
Friday, September 18, 2020 Bemidji MN Bemidji Regional Airport [516]
Saturday, September 19, 2020 Fayetteville NC Fayetteville Regional Airport [517]
Monday, September 21, 2020 Vandalia OH Dayton International Airport [518]
Swanton Toledo Express Airport [519]
Tuesday, September 22, 2020 Moon Township PA Pittsburgh International Airport [520]
Thursday, September 24, 2020 Jacksonville FL Cecil Airport [521]
Friday, September 25, 2020 Newport News VA Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport [522]
Saturday, September 26, 2020 Middletown PA Harrisburg International Airport [523]
Wednesday, September 30, 2020 Duluth MN Duluth International Airport [524]
Monday, October 12, 2020 Sanford FL Orlando Sanford International Airport [525]
Tuesday, October 13, 2020 Johnstown PA John Murtha Johnstown-Cambria County Airport [526]
Wednesday, October 14, 2020 Des Moines IA Des Moines International Airport [526]
Thursday, October 15, 2020 Greenville NC Pitt-Greenville Airport [527]
Friday, October 16, 2020 Ocala FL Ocala International Airport [528]
Macon GA Middle Georgia Regional Airport [529]
Saturday, October 17, 2020 Muskegon MI Muskegon County Airport [530]
Janesville WI Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport [531]
Sunday, October 18, 2020 Carson City NV Carson City Airport [532]
Monday, October 19, 2020 Prescott AZ Prescott Regional Airport [533]
Tucson Tucson International Airport
Tuesday, October 20, 2020 Erie PA Erie International Airport [534]
Wednesday, October 21, 2020 Gastonia NC Gastonia Municipal Airport [535]
Friday, October 23, 2020 The Villages FL The Villages Polo Club [536]
Pensacola Pensacola International Airport
Saturday, October 24, 2020 Lumberton NC Robeson County Fairgrounds [537]
Circleville OH Pickaway Agriculture and Event Center [538]
Waukesha WI Waukesha County Airport [539]
Sunday, October 25, 2020 Manchester NH Manchester–Boston Regional Airport [540]
Monday, October 26, 2020 Allentown PA HoverTech International
Lititz Lancaster Airport [541]
Martinsburg Altoona–Blair County Airport [542]
Tuesday, October 27, 2020 Lansing MI Capital Region International Airport [543]
West Salem WI La Crosse Fairgrounds Speedway [544]
Omaha NE Eppley Airfield [545]
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 Bullhead City AZ Laughlin/Bullhead International Airport [546]
Goodyear AZ Phoenix Goodyear Airport [547]
Thursday, October 29, 2020 Tampa FL Raymond James Stadium [548]
Fayetteville NC Fayetteville Regional Airport [549]
Friday, October 30, 2020 Waterford Township MI Oakland County International Airport [550]
Green Bay WI Green Bay–Austin Straubel International Airport [551]
Rochester MN Rochester International Airport [552]
Saturday, October 31, 2020 Newtown PA The Keith House
Reading Reading Regional Airport [553]
Butler Pittsburgh-Butler Regional Airport [554]
Montoursville Williamsport Regional Airport
Sunday, November 1, 2020 Washington MI Michigan Stars Sports Center [555]
Dubuque IA Dubuque Regional Airport
Hickory NC Hickory Regional Airport
Rome GA Richard B. Russell Airport [555]
Opa-locka FL Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport [555]
Monday, November 2, 2020 Fayetteville NC Fayetteville Regional Airport
Scranton PA Wilkes-Barre Scranton International Airport [555]
Traverse City MI Cherry Capital Airport
Kenosha WI Kenosha Regional Airport
Grand Rapids MI Gerald R. Ford International Airport [555]

Technology edit

The Trump campaign used "geofencing". This technology detects when a smartphone is within a narrow geographic area like a church or a sports stadium, and it captures identifying information from that device. This allowed political marketers to gather names, addresses, and voter registration status of the people who were present at the event and who presumably share some ideological, religious, or other demographic affinities. In January 2020, The New York Times reported that "the Trump campaign is far ahead of the Democratic Party in the use of this technology."[556]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Informally announced on February 17, 2017
  2. ^ a b On August 3, 2020, Trump said he had the right to issue an executive order concerning mail-in voting. He elaborated, "We haven't got there yet, but we'll see what happens."[296] On August 4, he tweeted:

    Whether you call it Vote by Mail or Absentee Voting, in Florida the election system is Safe and Secure, Tried and True. Florida's Voting system has been cleaned up ... so in Florida I encourage all to request a Ballot & Vote by Mail![297]

  3. ^ A week later, Trump reiterated that he would "probably be giving [his] speech at the White House".[313]
  4. ^ The new citizens reportedly did not know their naturalizations would be televised. Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf also denied such knowledge.[323]
  5. ^ Clarifying his comments the next day, Trump said, "A person was on a plane, said that there were about 6 people like that person, more or less, and what happened is the entire plane filled up with the looters, the anarchists, the rioters, people that obviously were looking for trouble. And the person felt very uncomfortable on the plane. This would be a person you would know."[328]

References edit

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  2. ^ "Biden defeats Trump for White House, says 'time to heal'". AP NEWS. November 7, 2020. from the original on November 17, 2020. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  3. ^ Forgey, Quint (November 3, 2020). "Visiting campaign headquarters, Trump says 'losing is never easy'". Politico. Retrieved November 8, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d Scott, Eugene (April 17, 2017). "Trump campaign raking in money for 2020, disclosures show". CNN. Retrieved April 27, 2017. Trump's campaign committee has spent about $6.3 million during the first quarter of 2017. That includes giving more than $70,000 to the campaign committee's manager, Michael Glassner, who was Trump's deputy campaign manager, and more than $40,000 to John Pence, Vince [sic] President Mike Pence's nephew, who serves as the committee's deputy director.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Bender, Michael C. (February 19, 2019). "Trump adds senior campaign staff for 2020 race as risk of a GOP primary challenger rises". MarketWatch. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
  6. ^ "Trump campaign names Hogan Gidley as new press secretary". CBS.
  7. ^ "Lara Trump becomes face of Donald Trump's 2020 re-election campaign". The Daily Telegraph. London. October 19, 2017. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022. Retrieved April 23, 2018.
  8. ^ "Don Jr.'s Girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle Lands Top Trump Campaign Role". The Daily Beast.
  9. ^ "Jenna Ellis, a senior legal adviser to the Trump campaign, is not the type of lawyer she plays on TV". The New York Times. December 3, 2020.
  10. ^ "Will This Election Be A Replay Of Bush v. Gore At The Supreme Court? Not Likely". NPR.
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  16. ^ "Trump's Jewish point person: President has fought anti-Semitism 'everywhere and anywhere'".
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  21. ^ a b c "'Keep America Great': Trump Reelection Effort Raised $13M So Far, Report Says". Fox News. April 15, 2017. Retrieved April 28, 2017.
  22. ^ Benen, Steve (March 21, 2017). "Trump picks the wrong slogan: 'Promises made, Promises kept'". MSNBC. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
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  24. ^ "FEC Form 99/Form 2" (PDF). Federal Election Commission. January 20, 2017. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
  25. ^ Gold, Matea. "President Trump tells the FEC he qualifies as a candidate for 2020". The Washington Post. pp. January 20, 2017. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
  26. ^ Groppe, Maureen (November 7, 2018). "President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence renew their political vows in advance of 2020". USA Today. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
  27. ^ "By the numbers: President Donald Trump's failed efforts to overturn the election". www.usatoday.com. January 6, 2021. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  28. ^ Schwartz, Matthew S. (December 5, 2020). "Trump's Legal Losses Come Fast And Furious". NPR.org. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  29. ^ "Trump And His Allies Have Lost Nearly 60 Election Fights In Court (And Counting)". BuzzFeed News. December 14, 2020. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  30. ^ Trump, Donald (January 7, 2021). "Video: 'My campaign vigorously pursued every legal avenue to contest the election results...Congress has certified the results. A new administration will be inaugurated on January 20th. My focus now turns to ensuring a smooth, orderly, and seamless transition of power...Serving as your president has been the honor of my lifetime.'". from the original on January 8, 2021. Retrieved January 7, 2021 – via Twitter.
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  36. ^ a b "Details for Candidate ID : P80001571". fec.gov/. Federal Election Commission.
  37. ^ "FEC Form 99/Form 2" (PDF). Federal Election Commission. January 20, 2017. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
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donald, trump, 2020, presidential, campaign, then, incumbent, president, united, states, donald, trump, member, republican, party, unsuccessfully, sought, reelection, 2020, united, states, presidential, election, been, inaugurated, first, term, january, 2017, . Then incumbent president of the United States Donald Trump a member of the Republican Party unsuccessfully sought reelection in the 2020 United States presidential election He had been inaugurated for his first term on January 20 2017 and officially announced his re election campaign on June 18 2019 Donald Trump for President 2020Campaign2020 Republican primaries 2020 U S presidential electionCandidateDonald Trump45th President of the United States 2017 2021 Mike Pence48th Vice President of the United States 2017 2021 AffiliationRepublican PartyStatusAnnounced June 18 2019 a Presumptive nominee March 17 2020 Official nominee August 24 2020 Election day November 3 2020 Projected defeat November 7 2020 1 2 Formally conceded January 7 2021 Left office January 20 2021HeadquartersArlington Virginia 3 Key peopleBill Stepien campaign manager Michael Glassner campaign committee manager 4 Tim Murtaugh communications director 5 Kayleigh McEnany national press secretary 2019 2020 senior adviser Oct 2020 2021 5 Hogan Gidley national press secretary 6 Lara Trump senior consultant 7 Brad Parscale senior advisor digital data strategies until 2020 Kimberly Guilfoyle senior adviser 8 Jenna Ellis senior legal adviser 9 Harmeet Dhillon legal adviser 10 Katrina Pierson senior adviser 11 Bill Shine senior adviser 12 John McEntee senior adviser 13 Jason Miller senior adviser 14 Marc Lotter strategic communications director 5 Steven Cheung communications consultant 15 Boris Epshteyn strategic advisor 16 John Pence campaign committee deputy executive director 4 Bradley Crate campaign treasurer 17 Cole Blocker finance director 5 Megan Powers administrative operations director 5 Chris Carr political director 5 Justin Clark senior political adviser 5 Cliff Sims speechwriter 18 ReceiptsUS 811 898 514 36 19 October 14 2020 SloganKeep America Great 20 21 Promises made promises kept 22 Jobs Jobs Jobs Keep America WorkingTheme song Y M C A by Village PeopleWebsitewww wbr donaldjtrump wbr comTrump began his re election campaign unusually early for an incumbent president He began spending money on his reelection effort within weeks of his election and officially filed his campaign with the Federal Election Commission on the day of his inauguration From February 2017 onward Trump held more than 150 rallies and fundraisers for this campaign visiting key electoral states The campaign also raised funds and ran two nationwide advertising campaigns Trump said in several stump speeches that the slogans for the 2020 race would be Keep America Great and Promises Made Promises Kept 23 24 25 On November 7 2018 Trump confirmed that Mike Pence would be his vice presidential running mate in 2020 26 Trump s re election bid was ultimately unsuccessful the 2020 election was won by the Democratic Party ticket of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris This marked the first time since 1992 that an incumbent president lost reelection Trump refused to accept the results he and his allies made false and disproven claims of fraud pressured elections officials filed several unsuccessful lawsuits 27 28 29 and directly attempted to overturn the results at the county state and federal level This culminated in the attack on the United States Capitol on January 6 2021 for which Trump was impeached a second time The day after the attack Trump stated that a new administration would be succeeding his without mentioning president elect Biden by name in a video posted on Twitter 30 31 32 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Permanent campaign 1 2 Political positions 1 3 Approval ratings 1 3 1 Domestic trips made by Donald Trump as U S president 2 2017 campaign developments 2 1 January 2017 launch 2 2 February 2017 first rally 2 3 March 2017 second and third rallies 2 4 April 2017 fourth rally 2 5 May 2017 launch of first advertising campaign 2 6 June 2017 fifth rally first fundraiser and visits to swing states 2 7 July 2017 sixth rally 2 8 September 2017 2 9 October 2017 2 10 November 2017 2 11 December 2017 3 2018 campaign developments 3 1 February 2018 3 2 March 2018 3 3 April 2018 3 4 May 2018 3 5 June 2018 3 6 October 2018 3 7 November 2018 3 8 December 2018 4 2019 campaign developments 4 1 January March 2019 4 1 1 El Paso rally 4 1 2 CPAC 4 1 3 Grand Rapids 4 2 April June 2019 4 3 July 2019 4 4 August 2019 4 5 September 2019 4 6 October December 2019 5 2020 campaign developments 5 1 January 2020 5 2 February 2020 5 3 March 2020 5 4 April 2020 5 5 May 2020 5 6 June 2020 5 7 July 2020 5 8 August 2020 5 9 September 2020 5 9 1 Musician Eddy Grant s copyright infringement lawsuit 5 10 October 2020 5 11 Election Day and beyond 6 Polling 7 Finances 7 1 Funding pace 7 2 Notable expenditures and allegations of grifting 7 2 1 Trump properties 7 2 2 Legal and compliance work 7 2 3 Advertisements 7 2 4 Memorabilia 7 2 5 Money funneled through Brad Parscale 8 Groups supporting Trump 8 1 The Republican Party 8 2 Super PACs 8 2 1 Amount spent by outside groups in support of campaign 8 3 Other groups 9 Rallies 10 Technology 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksBackground editTrump s predecessors merged their campaign committees into their party s committee following their election victories Following his 2016 election victory Trump eschewed this presidential tradition and retained a separate campaign committee which continued raising funds In December 2016 the campaign raised 11 million 33 These moves indicated that Trump was already eyeing a 2020 run 34 Trump started spending money on the 2020 race on November 24 2016 sixteen days after the end of the 2016 election The earliest campaign disbursement that his committees reported was spent towards the 2020 presidential primaries was for the purchase of a Delta Air Lines ticket on this date 35 Trump officially filed his re election campaign with the FEC on January 20 2017 the day of his inauguration 36 37 38 39 Trump launched his re election campaign earlier in his presidency than his predecessors did Barack Obama 2012 George W Bush 2004 Bill Clinton 1996 George H W Bush 1992 and Ronald Reagan 1984 all declared their candidacies for reelection in the third year of their presidencies 40 41 His immediate successor Joe Biden 2024 also declared his candidacy for reelection in the third year of his presidency Trump filed the papers for his re election campaign approximately 47 months prior to the date of the election 40 In contrast both Reagan and George H W Bush did so approximately twelve George W Bush approximately eighteen and both Clinton and Obama and later Biden approximately nineteen months before those elections 40 While previous presidents had held rallies in the early days of their presidency to garner support for legislation such rallies differed from Trump s in that they were funded by the White House rather than by campaign committees 41 42 One of the advantages of having his campaign committee fund the events is that organizers can more discriminately screen attendees refusing entry to non supporters 43 Trump s February 2017 rally in Melbourne Florida was the earliest campaign rally for an incumbent president 44 45 By filing for his campaign as early as he did Trump gave himself a head start on fundraising This theoretically helped discourage primary challengers 45 Since his three predecessors Bill Clinton George W Bush and Barack Obama won re election had Trump been reelected it would have been the first time in American history that four consecutive presidents were elected to two terms 46 47 Permanent campaign edit Although Trump s early campaign filing was extraordinarily unusual aspects of a permanent campaign are not entirely unprecedented in American politics Such a phenomenon had a presence in the White House at least as early as the presidency of Bill Clinton Under the advice of Sidney Blumenthal Clinton s staff continued to engage in campaign methodology once in office using polling for assistance in making decisions 44 48 Political observers who bolster the opinion that a permanent campaign has had a significant impact on recent presidencies argue that decisions by presidents have increasingly been made with considerations to their impact on voter approval 49 The concept of a permanent campaign also describes the focus which recent presidents have given to electoral concerns during their tenures in office with the distinction between the time they have spent governing and the time they have spent campaigning having become blurred 49 Political observers consider the rise in presidential fundraising as a symptom of the permanent campaign 49 The disproportionately large amounts of time presidents have spent visiting key electoral states and a comparatively small amount of time they have spent visiting states that pose little electoral importance to them has been pointed to as evidence of ulterior electoral motives influencing presidential governance emblematic of the blurred lines between campaigning and governance in the White House 49 48 For instance George W Bush embarked on 416 domestic trips during his first three years in office This was 114 more than his predecessor Bill Clinton made in his first three years 48 In his first year 36 of Bush s domestic trips were to the 16 states that were considered swing states after having been decided the closest margins during the 2000 election 48 In his second year 45 of his domestic travel was to these states and his third year 39 of his domestic travel was to these states 48 According to the Associated Press a data analysis firm named Data Propria launched in May 2018 to provide ad targeting services and run by former officials of Cambridge Analytica is working on public relations for the Trump 2020 re election campaign 50 51 52 Political positions edit Main article Political positions of Donald Trump Emerging from the 2020 convention the campaign agenda for a second term was primarily to build on the first term agenda 53 As some George Floyd protests included violent incidents Trump emphasized law and order as a major campaign theme directing particular criticism at antifa Trump and attorney general Bill Barr asserted that antifa had organized the protests although there was no evidence to support that Barr had also baselessly linked antifa to the Black Lives Matter movement 54 55 56 Three August 2020 DHS draft reports did not mention antifa as a domestic terrorism risk and ranked white supremacy as the top risk higher than that of foreign terrorist groups 57 Brian Murphy until August 2020 the DHS undersecretary for intelligence and analysis asserted in a September 2020 whistleblower complaint 58 that secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf and his deputy Ken Cuccinelli instructed him to modify intelligence assessments to ensure they matched up with the public comments by President Trump on the subject of ANTIFA and anarchist groups and to downplay the severity of risk associated with white supremacy which Murphy said he declined to do 59 The campaign sent a fundraising text message to supporters in September 2020 stating an ANTIFA ALERT continuing They ll attack your homes if Joe s elected 60 Approval ratings edit See also Polling Presidential approval ratings while rising slightly throughout the second half of his first term have generally shown Trump to be one of the least popular presidents in the history of modern opinion polling during a presidential election year 61 62 63 Political observers point out that presidential job approval is highly partisan 64 with Gallup writing in March 2020 The 92 approval among Republicans and 42 among independents are close to his highest ratings for those groups Meanwhile his approval rating among Democrats currently 8 hasn t been above 13 since he took office in February 2017 The current 84 point gap in approval between Republicans and Democrats is just a few points shy of the record polarization Gallup found in late January and early February 65 In the midst of the COVID 19 pandemic in early spring 2020 Trump s approval rating saw a small but notable rally in support 66 67 followed by a tick down in mid 2020 68 69 70 In June and July 2020 public polling showed Trump s approval significantly weakening 71 72 73 Domestic trips made by Donald Trump as U S president edit For a more comprehensive list see List of presidential trips made by Donald Trump The following maps document the frequency with which Trump has visited each state and territory during his presidency nbsp 2017 nbsp 2018 nbsp 2019 Washington D C 7 or more visits 6 visits 5 visits 4 visits 3 visits 2 visits 1 visit 0 visits2017 campaign developments editSee also List of post election Donald Trump rallies Post inauguration rallies January 2017 launch edit On January 10 2017 Politico reported that Trump would be keeping his campaign offices in Trump Tower open in order to lay the groundwork for a re election campaign 34 By that time his campaign offices at Trump Tower already included a staff of about ten people led by Republican strategist Michael Glassner 34 4 Glassner s deputy is John Pence nephew of Vice President Mike Pence 4 The campaign staff was focused on data building and fundraising for a 2020 re election campaign 34 74 On January 18 Trump revealed in an interview with The Washington Post that he had decided Keep America Great would be his 2020 re election campaign slogan 20 75 Two days later on the day of his inauguration Trump filed a form with the Federal Election Commission FEC declaring that he qualified as a candidate for the 2020 presidential election 36 38 39 February 2017 first rally edit nbsp Trump speaking at his first campaign rally in FloridaBy February 1 2017 Trump s re election campaign had already raised over 7 million 76 The first rally organized by the campaign was held on February 18 2017 in Melbourne Florida 77 and was attended by an estimated 9 000 supporters 78 It was the earliest an incumbent president had ever held a re election campaign rally 44 During the rally Trump defended his actions and criticized the media 44 He referred to a nonexistent incident last night in Sweden while criticizing the asylum policies of several European countries 79 After backlash from the press and the Swedish government 80 81 Trump said he was referring to a Fox News program aired the previous day 82 83 On February 24 Trump spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference 84 an annual event which has often held a presidential straw poll 85 However the CPAC 2017 straw poll did not include a preference survey on presidential candidates 86 nbsp Trump laying a wreath at the tomb of Andrew Jackson at The Hermitage prior to his Nashville Tennessee rally nbsp Trump speaking at his rally in Nashville Tennessee March 15 2017 nbsp Rally in Louisville Kentucky March 20 2017 March 2017 second and third rallies edit On March 4 there were a series of local rallies held by allies of the campaign in some fifty cities 87 Several of the rallies were met by counter demonstrations 88 where some protesters were arrested 89 90 Other events were held around the country throughout March some of which resulted in violence 91 The campaign s second rally was held a month later in Nashville on March 15 and coincided with the 250th birthday of Andrew Jackson Prior to the rally Trump paid tribute to Jackson and laid a wreath at his tomb 92 93 94 95 During the rally Trump promised to repeal the Affordable Care Act Obamacare and defended his revised travel ban which was put on hold by Derrick Watson a federal judge in Hawaii hours later 96 A third rally was held by the campaign in Louisville on March 20 At the rally Trump promoted efforts to repeal Obamacare 97 On March 29 it was reported that Lara Trump the president s daughter in law had been hired as a consultant by the campaign s digital vendor Giles Parscale 98 April 2017 fourth rally edit By mid April the Trump campaign had a staff of around twenty employees 99 Trump gave a speech on April 28 at an event for the National Rifle Association of America 100 101 nbsp Trump and Pence arrive in Pennsylvania on April 29 for their rally in Harrisburg Trump held his fourth campaign rally on April 29 in Harrisburg Pennsylvania which coincided with the hundredth day of Trump s presidency 102 103 It also took place the same night as the White House Correspondents Dinner which Trump did not attend 103 104 In addition to Trump Vice President Pence also spoke at the April 29 rally May 2017 launch of first advertising campaign edit On May 1 the campaign announced that they were spending 1 5 million on national advertisements touting Trump s accomplishments in the first hundred days 105 106 The ad buy which included advertisements targeted at voters who supported specific agenda items of Trump s presidency 105 came approximately 42 months before election day 2020 39 106 107 or any other major party s candidate declarations 107 108 FactCheck org found several inaccuracies in the advertisement 109 and Eric Zorn of the Chicago Tribune described the 30 second advertisement as being stuffed with Trump s signature misleading puffery 108 Additionally original versions of the ad showed Trump shaking hands with H R McMaster an active duty military member who was barred from participating in any political advocacy while in uniform 110 Subsequent airings of the advertisement substituted this clip 105 110 The ad claimed that the fake news media refused to report the successes of the administration 105 107 111 but Forbes pointed out that the ad itself cited mainstream media sources including CNBC The Boston Globe and The New York Times 111 Because of this accusation against the news media CNN decided to stop running the ad a decision that campaign manager Michael Glassner criticized as an action to censor our free speech 112 ABC CBS and NBC later joined CNN in refusing to play the ad 113 Lara Trump a consultant to the campaign and the daughter in law of the president called the ad removals an unprecedented act of censorship in America that should concern every freedom loving citizen 113 114 On May 8 shortly after reporter Cecilia Vega asked White House press secretary Sean Spicer about statements that Trump s 2016 campaign had issued in regards to temporarily banning Muslims from entering the United States Trump s campaign website purged itself of all campaign statements from the 2016 campaign 115 116 Campaign chairman Michael Glassner later announced that the website was being redesigned The redesign of Trump s campaign website was seen by media sources as laying the groundwork for a full bodied reelection campaign 117 118 The Washington Examiner s David Druckert pointed out on Twitter that the redesigned website featured an image of Trump with a uniformed military officer on its Donate page which violated the Department of Defense s regulation that prohibits uniformed military officers from engaging in any political activity 119 On May 18 Trump hosted chairmen of the Colorado Iowa Michigan New Hampshire North Carolina Ohio and Pennsylvania state parties at the White House Each of their states are considered to be presidential swing states 120 On May 25 Trump s sons Donald Jr and Eric along with Eric s wife Lara held a series of meetings at the Washington D C offices of the Republican National Committee RNC to outline campaign strategy 121 122 June 2017 fifth rally first fundraiser and visits to swing states edit nbsp Counter protesters at the Pittsburgh Not Paris RallyOn June 1 President Trump announced his plans to withdraw from the Paris Agreement saying I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh not Paris Soon afterwards the campaign announced it would hold a Pittsburgh Not Paris Rally across from the White House 123 124 The rally was held June 3 at Lafayette Square The event was sponsored by the Fairfax County Republican Committee and the Republican Party of Virginia 125 Relatively few people attended the event 123 126 with estimates varying from 200 people including counter protesters to dozens of supporters 125 126 127 By comparison more people attended the anti Trump March for Truth which was held the same day 128 Trump began campaigning in Iowa in June Iowa was considered to be a perennial swing state 129 and the Iowa caucus is scheduled as the earliest presidential primary election 130 Iowa has also been home to nonbinding straw polls held ahead of the primaries Trump won the 2015 straw poll among Republican candidates 131 On June 7 Trump delivered what the New York Daily News described as a campaign style speech in Cincinnati Ohio 132 Five days later reports surfaced that Trump was making plans to embark on a more expansive tour that would visit several battleground states 133 nbsp Trump in Iowa holding his fifth official rally of the campaignTrump held his fifth official campaign rally in Cedar Rapids in eastern Iowa 134 135 The area home to a large population of working class whites was seen as a strong region for Trump to find a base of political support 136 The date for the rally having been changed several times was ultimately held on June 21 137 marking the first time in his presidency that Trump traveled west of the Mississippi River 138 At the rally Iowa GOP state chairman Jeff Kaufmann verbally attacked Nebraskan senator Ben Sasse who was speculated by some as a potential challenger to Trump in the 2020 Republican primaries 139 140 Vice President Pence attended Joni Ernst s 3rd Annual Roast and Ride fundraiser held on June 3 at the Central Iowa Expo near Boone Iowa 141 The previous editions of this event have included presidential campaign appearances Trump himself had previously attended Ernst s fundraiser in 2016 while campaigning in Iowa and seven Republican presidential contenders attended the event in 2015 142 On June 28 the president hosted a fundraiser at his company s hotel in Washington D C benefitting the Trump Victory Committee a joint committee that raises funds both for his reelection campaign and for the RNC 143 144 145 The fundraiser was the first event Trump hosted for the Victory Committee since becoming president 143 as well as the first presidential campaign fundraiser The event was co organized by RNC chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel and RNC National Finance Chairman Steve Wynn 143 145 The fundraiser was attended by about 300 guests and was reportedly expected to gross 10 million 146 147 Trump was joined at the event by the first lady and top White House advisors 148 Among those reported to have been in attendance at the fundraiser were Mica Mosbacher Dean Heller and Katrina Pierson 148 149 150 Additionally Harold Hamm and a number of high profile figures were spotted in the hotel s lobby during the event 147 Press were barred from the event a break of precedent since reporters were permitted to the first fundraisers held by each of Trump s two predecessors 151 Trump s decision to host the event at a venue from which he personally profits garnered criticism 146 152 153 Throughout June the president also gave speeches at events in the swing states of Florida Ohio and Wisconsin 136 Lara Trump made appearances on behalf of the campaign at events in New York and Texas during the month of June 154 In New York Lara spoke at the Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel on June 20 for the annual New York Republican State Committee gala 155 By the end of June Trump had visited fewer states in his first six months in office compared to his two immediate predecessors Barack Obama and George W Bush 138 Both Obama and Bush had visited every time zone in the continental United States while Trump had so far visited only the Eastern and Central time zones 138 Obama and Bush also took both overnight and multiple day trips throughout the country while Trump s domestic travels had largely been limited to a two hour flight radius of Washington D C and his overnight stays were at Camp David Mar a Lago and Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster 138 One of the benefits Trump was speculated to obtain from such trips is more favorable coverage from local news outlets in the areas visited 136 Most of Trump s trips to Wisconsin were focused on the Milwaukee area in the southeast part of the state which Trump won in 2016 by a smaller margin than Mitt Romney had in 2012 136 July 2017 sixth rally edit On July 1 Trump delivered a speech at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts during an event honoring veterans The event was sponsored by First Baptist Dallas and the Salem Media Group The event was described as resembling one of Trump s campaign rallies 156 On July 6 The Hill reported that 2020 campaign merchandise bearing Trump s name including merchandise supporting and opposing his candidacy was selling more than those with the names of prospective opponents 157 First Daughter and Advisor to the President Ivanka Trump introduced Vice President Pence at a GOP fundraiser 158 In its mid July financial disbursement filing the campaign reported that on June 27 Donald Trump Jr made a payment to Alan Futerfas for legal consulting regarding his attempt to get dirt on Clinton in the 2016 Trump Tower meeting between him Jared Kushner Paul Manafort and one or more representatives of the Russian government 159 160 On July 24 Trump gave a highly political address at the National Scout Jamboree a traditionally non political event 161 nbsp Donald and Melania Trump at the campaign s sixth rallyTrump held his sixth campaign rally on July 25 at the Covelli Centre in Youngstown Ohio 162 163 During the speech Trump reveled in addressing an audience outside of the national capital 163 He also condemned predators and criminal aliens and called them animals Chicago Tribune writer Rex W Huppke criticized this comment comparing it to the previous day s remarks at the National Scout Jamboree 164 Trump also made remarks on the homicide rate in Chicago and called on the mayor Rahm Emanuel to get tough Emanuel responded the following day stating It is not about being tough it s about being smart and strategic 165 September 2017 edit nbsp Crowd at the Mother of All RalliesOn September 16 groups supporting Trump held a rally on the National Mall named the Mother of All Rallies Organizers were originally hoping to draw a million attendees 166 but in planning for security the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia expected only eighteen hundred Ultimately only about a thousand people attended 167 A national organization had originally planned to hold We Support Trump rallies across the nation on September 9 however subsequently reneged on those plans 168 However an independent rally in support of Trump was subsequently announced to be held on that date in Georgetown Delaware in a county where Trump got a majority of the vote in 2016 168 The Georgetown rally was sponsored by the Sussex County Republican Committee and attended by over 100 people 169 On September 26 Trump attended a campaign fundraising dinner hosted by the Republican National Committee in New York City The event was reported to have raised nearly 5 million with major donors spending up to 250 000 to dine with President Trump 170 Trump scheduled for a quick meeting with Nikki Haley and other U N officials immediately prior the fundraiser travel expenses were reportedly filed as government business and therefore taxpayer funded 170 Trump s pattern of mixing travel for fundraising activities with travel for government business has drawn criticism from government watchdog organizations 170 Trump was scheduled to headline a fundraiser in Dallas on September 27 which was canceled by its organizers in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey 171 October 2017 edit On October 16 Trump indicated his desire to see his 2016 general election opponent Hillary Clinton run again in 2020 Clinton had previously asserted that she had no desire to run for public office again 172 On October 25 the president traveled to Texas for a fundraiser hosted by the Dallas County Republican Party for both the RNC and his reelection campaign 171 170 173 The event was closed to the media Mark Knoller noted By my count this will be Pres Trump s 10th political fundraiser since taking office 9 of 10 were closed to press coverage including today 174 November 2017 edit In early November ethics watchdogs and political analysts expressed concerns over Trump s daughter in law Lara Trump assuming a greater role in the White House while also continuing to be an active member of Trump s reelection campaign 175 Lara Trump while working for the reelection campaign had reportedly held private political meetings with government officials such as Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke Veteran Affairs Committee chairman Phil Roe and Representative Ron DeSantis 175 December 2017 edit In December 2017 polls showed that more than 40 percent of Americans wanted Trump impeached reportedly higher than the percentage of Americans who said at the time that they planned to vote for him in 2020 176 2018 campaign developments editSee also List of post election Donald Trump rallies Post inauguration rallies and List of presidential trips made by Donald Trump during 2018 February 2018 edit In February 2018 the Trump campaign sent out an email with a photo of Trump paying a hospital visit to a student survivor of the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting After stating that Trump prioritizes the safety of American students and schools the email linked to the campaign s donations page 177 nbsp Brad Parscale was chosen as Trump s 2020 campaign manager in February 2018 On February 25 the Drudge Report announced that the president had chosen Brad Parscale as the campaign manager for his re election campaign 178 Parscale was the digital strategist for the previous campaign as the head of Giles Parscale which raised some concerns about how the campaign would conduct its advertising 179 March 2018 edit On March 10 Trump held a rally in Moon Township Pennsylvania He campaigned for Rick Saccone for the local special election and also declared that his 2020 campaign slogan would be Keep America Great 180 On March 13 Trump made his first trip to the state of California as president to attend a campaign fundraiser at the Beverly Hills home of Tampa Bay Buccaneers owner Ed Glazer 181 The same day it was announced that Katrina Pierson and John McEntee had been hired by the campaign as senior advisors 182 183 April 2018 edit In 2018 Trump skipped the White House Correspondent s Dinner holding a rally on the same night as he had the previous year this time in Washington Michigan 184 May 2018 edit In May Trump held a rally in Indiana where he once again shared that his 2020 campaign slogan would be Keep America Great Although he had already revealed this before Trump told the supporters at his rally Keep America Great Because we are doing so well that in another two years when we start the heavy campaign Make America Great Again wouldn t work out too well It s going to be Keep America Great because that s exactly where we are headed 185 June 2018 edit On June 20 Trump held a rally in Duluth Minnesota supporting Republican Congressional candidate Pete Stauber in the 2018 midterm elections 186 and addressing his own 2020 prospects 187 in the state among other subjects The rally came on the day the president had signed an executive order on the treatment of immigrant families with children 186 At the rally he said enforcement at the border would be just as tough under the executive order 187 Trump traveled to the Nevada Republican Convention in Las Vegas on Saturday June 23 and also appeared on the trip at a fundraiser for U S senator Dean Heller Along with policy issues Trump addressed Heller s challenger U S representative Jacky Rosen as Wacky Jacky The president continued asking of the simultaneous Nevada Democratic Party convention in Reno featuring Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts Wacky Jacky is campaigning with Pocahontas can you believe it 188 On June 27 the president held a rally in Fargo North Dakota supporting Representative Kevin Cramer in his challenge to sitting Senator Heidi Heitkamp Trump also addressed at the rally the just announced news of the retirement from the Supreme Court of Justice Anthony Kennedy Cramer addressed the issue of abortion and Heitkamp s position on the Pain Capable Unborn Child Protection Act as his reason for entering the race On behalf of the most forgotten people Mr Cramer said to the president as both men took the stage to deafen applause the unborn babies thank you for standing for life 189 October 2018 edit During a campaign rally in Houston on October 22 Trump defined himself as a nationalist acknowledging the controversial use of the word 190 November 2018 edit The campaign financed a number of rallies in support of Republican candidates in the Midterm election 191 While the Republicans grew their Senate majority in the elections they lost a significant amount of their House delegation including control of the chamber On November 7 Trump confirmed that Mike Pence would be his vice presidential running mate in 2020 192 December 2018 edit The campaign makes the unprecedentedly early move to merge the campaign s field operations with that of the Republican National Committee 193 The campaign tapped White House political director Bill Stepien and Director of Public Liaison Justin Clark as senior political advisors who would focus on delegate organization and to ensure the 2020 Republican National Convention would run smoothly 194 2019 campaign developments editJanuary March 2019 edit In January in a unanimous vote the Republican National Committee informally endorsed the president s campaign and coordination between the two entities formally began 195 In February a state by state effort was launched by Trump s campaign team to oppose any presidential challenges from within the Republican Party The campaign has used endorsements lobbying and state party rule changes to ensure Trump does not face opposition during the Republican nominating convention with a senior campaign adviser calling it a process of ensuring that the national convention is a television commercial for the president for an audience of 300 million and not an internal fight 196 197 El Paso rally edit The first rally of the year took place at the El Paso County Coliseum in El Paso Texas on February 12 It was highlighted by pro wall talking points and a BBC cameraman filming the event getting into a scuffle with a supporter that the president disavowed 198 CPAC edit From February 28 to March 3 the annual Conservative Political Action Conference or CPAC took place in National Harbor Maryland This year the usual straw poll was not held and on the last day Trump made a two and a half hour long speech 199 which was covered live by C SPAN and Fox News and was prominently featured in media throughout the world Grand Rapids edit On March 28 the president held a rally in Grand Rapids Michigan during which he reveled in his alleged exoneration calling for Democrats to apologize for the Russia investigation and to stop the ridiculous bullshit 200 Trump also attacked Adam Schiff the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee as little pencil neck who has the smallest thinnest neck I ve ever seen and someone who is not a long ball hitter The president then ticked through those he felt wronged him as the crowd chanted Lock them up Lock them up 201 April June 2019 edit In April Trump visited the border at Calexico California 202 before attending campaign events in Los Angeles and Las Vegas 203 204 10th april Trump has had a video removed from Twitter because it used Hans Zimmer s track Why Do We Fall from The Dark Knight Rises without requesting copyright from Warner Bros Pictures 205 206 Trump may also have referred to the Batman universe in his campaign 207 208 209 The New York Times reported in June 2019 that after Trump had been briefed on internal polling showing he was trailing Joe Biden in several key states he instructed aides to deny it and to publicly state that other data showed him doing well The next day Trump tweeted The Fake Corrupt News Media said they leaked into polling done by my campaign They reported Fake numbers that they made up and don t even exist later telling reporters we are winning in every single state that we polled Public polls at the time showed Trump trailing in key states such as Texas Michigan and Pennsylvania 210 211 212 Days later the Trump campaign severed ties with some of its internal pollsters 213 Trump also said that something weird is happening at Fox News after their poll also showed him losing to several Democratic candidates 214 On June 12 2019 during an interview with ABC News Trump said that were a foreign country to offer damaging information on a political opponent his reaction would be I think I d want to hear it There s nothing wrong with listening Trump also said the FBI director is wrong about the need to inform the FBI about a foreign government attempting to influence an election 215 216 217 Trump initially claimed his comments were mischaracterized prompting ABC News to release a transcript 217 On June 13 Federal Election Commission chairwoman Ellen Weintraub stated It is illegal for any person to solicit accept or receive anything of value from a foreign national in connection with a U S election 218 On June 14 Trump told Fox News If I don t hear what it is you re not going to know what is Now if I thought anything was incorrect or badly stated I d report it to the Attorney General the FBI 217 A joint report published in June 2019 by the Center for Public Integrity NBC News and CNBC detailed that the 2016 and 2020 Trump campaigns have yet to pay bills totaling over 800 000 to ten city governments for costs incurred to ensure public safety concerning Trump campaign rallies The rallies took place from January 2016 to August 2016 and from September 2018 to February 2019 219 On June 18 Trump officially launched his re election campaign at a rally at the Amway Center in Orlando Florida 220 On June 21 writer E Jean Carroll alleged via New York magazine that Trump raped her in a department store dressing room in 1995 or 1996 Two friends of Carroll confirmed to New York that Carroll had previously confided in them regarding the incident Trump denied ever meeting Carroll although New York had published a photo of Trump and Carroll together in 1987 221 222 223 On June 24 Trump and the GOP launched WinRed a centralized small dollar fundraising platform designed to compete with Democrats ActBlue 224 225 July 2019 edit At a campaign rally on July 17 in North Carolina Trump criticized four Democratic congresswomen Alexandria Ocasio Cortez Ayanna Pressley Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib stating They never have anything good to say That s why I say Hey if you don t like it let em leave if they don t love it tell them to leave it 226 227 Trump said this in spite of his own history of criticizing previous United States administrations and policies including his 2016 campaign slogan Make America Great Again indirectly asserting America was no longer great and his first presidential speech decrying American carnage 228 229 In his speech Trump referenced Tlaib that s not somebody that loves our country 230 Trump also named Omar and continued that Omar looks down with contempt on Americans the crowd of Trump supporters reacted by chanting send her back 231 232 After the rally Trump tweeted What a crowd and what great people Asked about the chants on July 18 Trump said he disagreed with the chants and claimed he had tried to stop them by speaking very quickly August 2019 edit At an August 1 campaign rally in Cincinnati Ohio Trump declared We will be ending the AIDS epidemic shortly in America and curing childhood cancer very shortly This echoed his earlier comments during the June 2019 Orlando Florida rally when Trump pledged we will come up with the cures to many many problems to many many diseases including cancer 233 Despite attacking four Democratic congresswomen as being too critical of America Trump continued a recent trend of criticizing major American cities at the rally Trump singled out the cities of San Francisco Los Angeles and Chicago Trump said that Democrats governing liberal cities deliver poverty for their constituents and privilege for themselves with federal funding becoming stolen money and it s wasted money He also blamed protesters interrupting his rally on the premise that Cincinnati must have a Democrat mayor Trump highlighted Baltimore having a higher homicide rate 55 8 of 100 000 people than the country Afghanistan although he did not propose a policy to address the issue 234 235 On August 7 following the 2019 Dayton shooting and the 2019 El Paso shooting Trump visited Dayton Ohio and El Paso Texas That day Trump fired back at Democratic presidential candidates Beto O Rourke be quiet and Joe Biden boring who had previously criticized him 236 237 Trump additionally labeled Democratic presidential candidate Julian Castro as a fool and not much of a man 238 While talking to medical staff at El Paso Trump mentioned that his February 2019 campaign rally in the city had drawn a much bigger crowd than O Rourke s campaign rally that same day A campaign style video of Trump shaking hands and posing for photos during the visit was released by the White House 239 September 2019 edit On September 11 Trump tweeted that he has not even started campaigning yet 240 As the Trump Ukraine scandal emerged and Trump faced an impeachment inquiry the Trump campaign launched a 10 million television and web campaign with a video claiming Joe Biden had offered Ukraine 1 billion if they fired a prosecutor who was investigating his son s company including video of Biden boasting that the prosecutor had been fired 241 Hunter Biden served on the board of directors of Burisma Holdings the owner of which was investigated but Biden himself was not investigated Then vice president Biden had in March 2016 threatened to withhold 1 billion in loan guarantees if Ukraine did not fire the prosecutor Viktor Shokin The Obama administration and other governments and non governmental organizations were concerned that Shokin was not adequately pursuing corruption in Ukraine was protecting the political elite and was regarded as an obstacle to anti corruption efforts In particular he was seen to be slow walking the Burisma investigation 242 243 The ad asserted that Trump had acted to fight corruption and Democrats were impeaching him for it No evidence has surfaced of any malfeasance by the Bidens 244 Previously in sworn testimony the administration officials said Giuliani directly conveyed the president s demands to them that Ukraine launch investigations into the son of former Vice President Joe Biden and a long debunked 2016 election related conspiracy However Trump later denied sending Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine to push Biden 245 October December 2019 edit As the impeachment investigation continued the campaign spent copious amounts of money defending the president against it 246 247 Prior to December 12 three lawsuits claimed Trump s business dealings have been violating the Constitution All these cases advanced to critical stages in federal courts 248 On the night of December 18 coinciding with the vote to impeach him Trump held a rally in Battle Creek Michigan He received criticism for suggesting the deceased representative John Dingell may have gone to hell 249 The Associated Press acquired a recording of senior Trump campaign advisor Justin Clark telling Wisconsin Republicans that traditionally it s always been Republicans suppressing votes in places and 2020 would be the time to start playing offense a little bit to protect their voters Clark asserted to the AP that he was speaking about how Republicans historically have been falsely accused of voter suppression 250 In October the Trump campaign ran a Facebook ad that falsely claimed Joe Biden offered to bribe Ukrainian officials to not investigate his son Hunter Biden 251 2020 campaign developments editJanuary 2020 edit The impeachment trial began on January 16 252 January 9 First campaign rally of 2020 was held at the 8 000 seat Huntington Center in Toldeo OH 253 January 14 Monster Rally in Green Bay WI 254 January 28 Monster Rally in Wildwood NJ 255 January 30 Monster Rally at Drake University s Knapp Center in Des Moines IA 256 January 31 The Kansas state convention began being the second official event of the Republican race February 2020 edit February 1 At the Kansas state convention the entire selection process took place culminating with the official binding of the delegation to Trump giving him his second state February 2 The Iowa caucuses the President received 31 464 97 1 of the vote 257 February 10 Monster Rally at the SNHU Arena in Manchester NH 258 February 13 In the New Hampshire primary the President received 129 461 85 7 of the votes cast 259 February 22 The Nevada state committee awarded all of its delegates to President Trump 260 March 2020 edit March 3 Super Tuesday With over 60 of delegates selected by this date the race for the nomination formally ended March 5 Facebook removed Trump campaign ads directing users to participate in an Official 2020 Congressional District Census on what was actually a campaign fundraising site 261 April 2020 edit April 23 The Trump campaign released a new app which offers rewards for sharing Trump s tweets 262 Late April Trump scolded campaign manager Brad Parscale after data from two polls one from the Trump s own campaign and one from the Republican National Committee showed Trump losing to Joe Biden in swing states reported The Washington Post and CNN At one point Trump said he may sue Parscale although it is unclear whether he was joking Both Trump and Parscale denied that Trump had shouted Parscale did not deny a conflict and he did not deny Trump saying he may sue Trump told the media he does not believe the polls 263 264 May 2020 edit May 4 CNN sent a cease and desist letter to the Trump campaign regarding its ad American Comeback which had begun running the previous evening on cable television 265 The ad selected words from a CNN interview and inserted them into a different context making it a clear example of deceptive editing The Washington Post explained 266 June 2020 edit June 8 After a CNN poll found Trump 14 percentage points behind Joe Biden Trump on Twitter declared the poll FAKE saying he had retained highly respected pollster McLaughlin amp Associates to analyze that poll The Republican Party s congressional campaign arm has advised Republicans to avoid employing McLaughlin amp Associates after it predicted in 2014 that Republican Representative Eric Cantor would win re election in a Republican primary by 34 points but Cantor actually lost by around 10 points Later in 2018 McLaughlin amp Associates predicted that Republican Representative Rob Woodall would win re election by 27 points but Woodall ended up winning by only 0 2 points 267 June 9 The Trump campaign sent a cease and desist letter to CNN over their poll demanding a retraction and apology CNN refused 268 During June Trump also suggested he might sue campaign manager Brad Parscale for presenting polling data showing the president trailing in several key states The New York Times describes this incident as a jest rather than a serious threat and participants in the call say Parscale responded to the threat by saying I love you too 269 June 10 Amid the COVID 19 pandemic in the United States the Trump campaign said the president would resume his campaign rallies the first being at Tulsa Oklahoma on June 19 270 Ticketholders must assume all risks related to exposure to COVID 19 and cannot hold the Trump campaign liable for resultant illness or injury 271 The rally was later pushed back by one day to June 20 out of respect for the original date falling on Juneteenth which was deemed insensitive due to the Tulsa race massacre and the ongoing George Floyd protests 272 June 12 The RNC decided not to write a new platform for 2020 reusing 2016 s which denounces the current president 273 June 15 In a tweet then campaign manager Brad Parscale indicated that ticket requests for the June 20 rally in Tulsa Oklahoma had surpassed a million 274 275 June 20 Trump held his first campaign rally in months at the BOK Center in Tulsa The seating capacity of the arena is 19 199 276 and in the days leading up to the event Parscale said more than 800 000 people had registered for the rally 277 Attendance at the rally was estimated to be just under 6 200 according to the Tulsa Fire Department 278 The numbers projected by the campaign were inaccurate partially due to TikTok users and K pop fans registering for the rally and not attending 279 280 Trump spent 14 minutes around 1 8th of the length of his speech talking about walking hesitatingly down a ramp at the United States Military Academy and the media coverage regarding the slowness of his descent 281 282 June 23 President Trump holds rallies in Phoenix and Yuma Arizona 283 284 July 2020 edit Celebrating Independence Day with an address at Mount Rushmore Trump said he was in a battle against a new far left fascism The New York Times characterized Trump as using the address to mount a full on culture war against a straw man version of the left that he portrayed as inciting mayhem and moving the country toward totalitarianism The Washington Post reported that while amplifying racism and stoking culture wars have been mainstays of Trump s public identity for decades they have been particularly pronounced this summer as the president has reacted to the national reckoning over systemic discrimination by seeking to weaponize the anger and resentment of some white Americans for his own political gain 285 286 On the evening of July 4 musician and entrepreneur Kanye West announced his campaign for the presidency Los Angeles Times reported that It s unclear whether West has filed any of the necessary paperwork to formally join the race between incumbent Donald Trump for whom West has expressed admiration and said this might be part of an effort to draw Black supporters away from Biden to help Trump 287 Vice President Pence and White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany claimed that Joe Biden had asserted police had become the enemy Biden s words were taken out of context as he had actually said the use of military grade heavy equipment by police officers can look like the military invading communities and thus makes police become the enemy in the perception of some in the community 288 According to Media Matters Trump surrogate Sean Hannity also misrepresented Biden s words to his radio and television audiences at least 17 times in July 289 On July 10 the Trump campaign postponed a rally planned for the next day in Portsmouth New Hampshire with Tim Murtaugh the campaign s communications director citing safety reasons because of Tropical Storm Fay 290 On July 15 Trump announced that he had promoted former deputy campaign manager Bill Stepien to campaign manager replacing Brad Parscale 291 292 On July 19 in an interview aired on Fox News Trump called the network s poll showing Biden leading by 8 fake further saying he would have to see if he would accept a loss in the election citing postal voting as a way it would be rigged against him 293 According to CNN There is no credible evidence that mail in voting is rife with corruption 294 and the concerted push by Trump to delegitimize mail in ballots is raising alarm bells among Republican operatives who are worried the President s demand for in person voting will mainly serve to dampen turnout among his own supporters 295 b During the first half of July the campaign ran a television ad more than a thousand times targeted at women in Ohio falsely asserting that Joe Biden proposes to defund the police which would increase home invasions and rapes concluding that You won t be safe in Joe Biden s America Trump won Ohio by eight points in 2016 but polls showed he was in a statistical tie with Biden in July 298 Across numerous other states Trump ran another ad falsely accusing Biden of proposing to defund the police with a simulated 9 1 1 call response You have reached the 9 1 1 police emergency line Due to the defunding of the police department we re sorry but no one is here to take your call If you are calling to report a rape please press one To report a murder press two To report a home invasion press three For all other crimes leave your name and number and someone will get back to you Our estimated wait time is currently five days Goodbye 299 In June and July the campaign spent over 2 million on Facebook ads One claims with 308 variations that Dangerous MOBS of far left groups are running through our streets and causing absolute mayhem They are DESTROYING our cities and rioting 300 In July television ads were aired intending to portray the violent turmoil of a future Biden presidency utilizing images of turmoil occurring during Trump s presidency 301 300 In mid July the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation amp Institute formally asked the Trump campaign and Republican National Committee to stop using Reagan s name and likeness for fundraising The request came after a campaign email solicitation offered commemorative coins with images of Trump and Reagan 302 On July 23 Trump announced the cancellation of the Jacksonville portion of the 2020 Republican National Convention citing rising COVID 19 numbers 303 On July 30 he publicly suggested delaying the election due to COVID 19 despite the authority to make such a change lying with Congress 304 Some of the most prominent leaders of the Republican Party rejected that such a prospect would be considered 305 Later the same day Trump walked back his comments while repeating his condemnation of postal voting 294 b Responding to the comments and the president s handling of the pandemic Timothy Egan writes in a New York Times opinion piece that Trump should do humanity a favor and surrender now saying this could save many lives of supporters who have listened to the lethal quackery from the presidential podium 306 According to multiple high ranking Republicans Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has signaled to Republican Senate candidates that they may distance themselves from Trump if they feel it will help them salvage their own campaigns 307 At the end of July the Trump campaign temporarily halted television advertising to reassess its messaging strategy A campaign official attributed the pause to the recent change in campaign leadership stating We ll be back on the air shortly even more forcefully exposing Joe Biden as a puppet of the radical left wing The campaign had 146 6 million budgeted for television and radio ads from Labor Day until November 308 Television advertising was expected to resume on August 3 with a focus on states that will vote the earliest 309 a new campaign ad features altered images to falsely portray Biden as alone and hiding in his basement 310 311 August 2020 edit On August 5 Trump announced that he was considering hosting his GOP convention acceptance speech from the White House saying It would be the easiest from the standpoint of security Fox News reported public criticism of the announcement including from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and cited the Hatch Act of 1939 which prohibits executive branch federal employees other than the president and vice president from engaging in partisan political activity 312 c On August 6 it was reported that the Commission on Presidential Debates had rejected the campaign s request to move or add a debate to early September before states begin early voting The first debate is scheduled for September 29 314 On August 14 Trump gathered about 300 police officers who support him at his golf club in Bedminster New Jersey and asked the crowd whether Sleepy Joe or Slow Joe was a better nickname for his opponent The former name which Trump has frequently used provoked a louder response He stated that Putin and Kim Jong un and President Xi of China they re not sleepy We can t have slow sleepy people dealing with them 315 On August 17 Miles Taylor former chief of staff to former Department of Homeland Security DHS secretary Kirstjen Nielsen published an op ed in The Washington Post and featured in an ad from Republican Voters Against Trump In the ad Taylor says What we saw over 2 1 2 years in that administration was terrifying He says that when the DHS raised national security concerns Trump wasn t interested in those things and attempted to exploit the department for his own political purposes and to fuel his own agenda including by withholding federal wildfire aid to California because he lacked support in the state Taylor asserts that Years of DHS planning for a pandemic threat have been largely wasted and concludes Given what I experienced I have to support Joe Biden for president 316 On August 20 Trump said in Old Forge Pennsylvania that Joe Biden is a puppet of the radical left movement that seeks to destroy the American way of life They don t want energy they don t want guns they don t want religion Later that day Trump tweeted against Biden the Obamas and mail in voting 317 The campaign also released a digital ad suggesting that Hunter Biden used his father s vice presidency to personally profit from a Chinese bank which Hunter denied in 2019 That night Biden accepted his party s presidential nomination at the 2020 Democratic National Convention 318 On August 22 The New York Times reported that Trump would speak on all four nights only one night being customary of the 2020 Republican National Convention scheduled for the next week that nearly half of the keynote speakers would be Trump family members and that two former producers of The Apprentice would be coordinating the event 319 On August 23 Trump senior adviser Jason Miller stated that the campaign was conserving money right now and focusing a little bit more smartly and a little more effectively on the states that are voting early while Politico reports that even in most of those early voting states Biden has dominated Trump regarding television ad spending 320 On the first night of the convention which had less viewers than both the 2016 convention and the 2020 Democratic event 321 Donald Trump Jr said his father s policies had been like rocket fuel to the economy especially to the middle class while Biden has promised to take that money back out of your pocket and keep it in the swamp That makes sense though considering Joe Biden is basically the Loch Ness Monster of the swamp For the past half century he s been lurking around in there He sticks his head up every now and then to run for president and then he disappears and doesn t do much in between 322 On the second night of the Republican National Convention Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke from Jerusalem where he was on state business prompting an investigation by House Democrats to determine whether this violated the Hatch Act which Pompeo had instructed federal employees to obey earlier in the year The use of the convention to perform a naturalization ceremony d and reveal the presidential pardon of Jon Ponder also drew scrutiny for using government business to promote Trump s campaign 324 325 326 On the final night of the convention Trump stated Your vote will decide whether we protect law abiding Americans or whether we give free rein to violent anarchists agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens And this election will decide whether we will defend the American way of life or whether we allow a radical movement to completely dismantle and destroy it 327 On August 31 Trump asserted in an interview with Laura Ingraham that Biden is being controlled by People that you ve never heard of people that are in the dark shadows When the program host said this sounded like the promotion of a conspiracy theory Trump elaborated that They re people that are on the streets they re people that are controlling the streets He further claimed that someone from a certain city boarded a plane which was almost completely loaded with thugs around seven in total wearing these dark uniforms black uniforms with gear and this and that to come to the Republican National Convention to do big damage e Then prompted by Ingraham to discuss how Biden s campaign was being financed he said The money is coming from some very stupid rich people who have no idea that if their thing ever succeeded which it won t they will be thrown to the wolves like you ve never seen before 328 In late August the Trump campaign shared a video featuring the soundbite of Joe Biden saying You won t be safe in Joe Biden s America The quote was taken wholly out of context as Biden was instead attributing this quote to Trump and Pence while Biden was stating that images of violence were actually that of Donald Trump s America today Meanwhile White House social media director Dan Scavino shared a fake video purportedly showing Biden sleeping during a live interview In fact the fake video combined two different clips one of Biden looking down with eyes half closed and one of an interviewer asking activist Harry Belafonte to wake up The fake video also had new audio added of snoring sounds 329 September 2020 edit On September 2 Trump told WECT TV in Wilmington North Carolina that people should vote twice once in person and again by mail to see if anyone stops them from committing this illegal act When CNN asked U S Attorney General Bill Barr for his input Barr claimed he did not know whether it was illegal to vote twice 330 Barr also told CNN that he believed that China was the biggest active threat to U S election security contradicting U S intelligence which had identified Russia and that foreign adversaries would likely sow the system with fraudulent mail in ballots although he admitted he had no evidence of this 331 On September 3 Trump spoke in Pennsylvania He encouraged voters to vote in person referencing potential mail fraud or ballots going missing He also focused on topics of the economy and public safety in light of mass protests and riots 332 He attacked Biden for mixed messages on fracking and for wearing a mask so much during the COVID 19 pandemic 333 332 The New York Times reported on September 5 that the Trump campaign had spent 58 million of donor money on legal bills far exceeding the levels of his predecessors at similar points in their campaigns The spending included routine matters and legal work involving the Russia investigation and his impeachment as well as relating to enforcement of nondisclosure agreements with former associates and his personal business interests 334 On September 7 The New York Times reported the campaign might be facing a cash crunch having spent more than 800 million of the 1 1 billion raised from early 2019 through July The Times reported the campaign had engaged in profligate spending until the new campaign manager Bill Stepien imposed controls The next day Trump stated he was prepared to spend his own money if necessary 335 336 From September 8 12 the Trump campaign released a Support Our Troops advertisement with a picture of silhouetted Russian Mikoyan MiG 29 fighter jets and soldiers carrying at least one Russian AK 74 assault rifle that drew international commentary 337 338 On September 10 The Washington Post reported that campaign manager Bill Stepien had already reduced spending on television ads Between Aug 10 and Sept 7 Biden s campaign spent about 90 million on television ads more than four times the 18 million spent by the Trump campaign the reporters said 339 340 341 On September 13 Trump held a rally in Henderson Nevada Due to the pandemic it was his first indoor rally since the Tulsa rally in June and it violated Nevada s prohibition against gatherings of more than 50 people 342 343 344 The Associated Press reported on September 14 that although the Trump campaign had spent heavily for months it did not seem to have hurt Biden in the polls and the Trump campaign no longer could count on having more cash than the Biden campaign Biden while achieving record breaking fundraising in August outspent Trump by nearly double that same month Meanwhile the Trump campaign canceled advertising in several states while retaining 200 million worth of reserved ads characterizing the cancellations as strategic 345 Trump held a rally on September 18 in Bemidji Minnesota Afterward 16 COVID 19 cases were traced to the rally and four more to a protest held just outside 346 On September 23 Trump was asked if he would commit to a peaceful transition of power if he lost the 2020 election to which he replied Well we ll have to see what happens He also said at a press briefing I ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots And the ballots are a disaster Get rid of the ballots and you ll have a very peaceful there won t be a transfer frankly There will be a continuation 347 That same day he said it was important to confirm his incoming Supreme Court nominee promptly because he believed the election outcome would be determined by the Supreme Court and he needed a majority to overcome this scam that the Democrats are pulling 348 Also that day Donald Trump Jr asserted in social media posts that The radical left are laying the groundwork to steal this election from my father adding Their plan is to add millions of fraudulent ballots that can cancel your vote and overturn the election asking able bodied people to join an election security army for his father 349 On September 23 Eric Trump shared a video on Twitter showing Joe Biden looking away from the camera during an interview with Telemundo Eric Trump used this to falsely claim that Biden was using a teleprompter This was re shared by Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller and then Trump himself In actuality Biden was looking away from the camera because there was a monitor off screen where Telemundo viewers were shown asking Biden questions Biden was replying to one such viewer directly 350 Meanwhile the Trump campaign ran video and pictorial advertisements on Facebook YouTube and Google which falsely claimed that Joe Biden used a teleprompter during an April 2020 interview with James Corden A teleprompter was seen on Biden s screen during that interview but that was in fact Corden s teleprompter not Biden s The teleprompter was shared on the screens of Corden s interviewees via Zoom The Trump campaign used the advertisement to claim that Biden can t handle an interview can t handle presidency 351 Another deceptive advertisement ran by the Trump campaign claimed that Joe Biden completely botches the Pledge of Allegiance as Biden had paraphrased the Pledge However Biden s words were taken out of context as Biden was not trying to legitimately recite the Pledge rather he was referencing specific parts of it while he argued that he would govern as president for all states instead of only Democratic controlled states 352 Trump s support among seniors weakened significantly going into the final weeks of the campaign 353 On September 24 he announced he was sending 200 drug discount cards to 33 million Medicare recipients at a cost approaching 7 billion 354 On September 25 Trump unveiled his Platinum Plan for Black America promising 500 billion in capital access as well as creating 3 million new jobs and bridging historic disparities in health care and education and making Juneteenth a national holiday 355 On September 29 the candidates participated in a first debate in Cleveland The event was characterized by Trump frequently interrupting both Biden and moderator Chris Wallace This prompted the debate commission to announce that microphones would be cut off at the next debate if the rules are broken by either candidate 356 On September 30 three cases of COVID 19 were traced to a Trump rally held in Duluth Minnesota 346 Musician Eddy Grant s copyright infringement lawsuit edit In September 2020 musician Eddy Grant sued Trump for unauthorized use of Grant s 1983 chart hit Electric Avenue song in an August 2020 presidential campaign video Trump posted the video on Twitter where it was viewed more than 13 million times before Twitter took it down after Grant s copyright complaint Grant s song plays during 40 seconds of the animated 55 second video 357 358 359 Trump unsuccessfully attempted to have the suit dismissed citing fair use and absolute presidential immunity 360 361 362 Grant asked for 300 000 in damages 361 Trump s attorney told the court that the deposition contained sensitive information about Trump s presidential campaign strategy He asked that Trump and campaign advisor Dan Scavino s testimony be permanently sealed because it would give an unwarranted competitive advantage to his opponents in the 2024 presidential election and because it could be used against them in other parallel litigations unrelated to this matter 363 The case Grant v Trump 1 20 cv 07103 is pending in federal court in the Southern District New York 364 October 2020 edit On October 2 two hours after it was announced that White House senior advisor Hope Hicks had tested positive for COVID 19 365 366 Trump tweeted that both he and First Lady Melania Trump had tested positive as well and would immediately go into quarantine 367 As a result they cancelled all in person campaign events scheduled in the coming days including a rally in Orlando Sanford International Airport 368 Several other White House members and associates tested positive for the virus including Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien 369 The Trump campaign ran Facebook advertisements featuring fake photos altered to show Joe Biden wearing an earpiece The advertisements included captions including Who is in Joe s ear and that Biden declined an earpiece inspection at the debate Asked to comment on the advertisements the Trump campaign claimed that they were obvious satire 370 On October 7 Vice President Pence participated in a debate with Senator Kamala Harris the Democratic candidate for vice president on the Biden ticket that was held by USA Today and moderated by Susan Page the Washington bureau chief of the newspaper 371 Trailing in polls during the month leading to the election Trump became increasingly insistent that his political adversaries be indicted including Biden former president Obama and Hillary Clinton and that documents be declassified and released including Clinton s emails 372 373 Six weeks after the Republican convention the Trump campaign canceled all television and radio advertising in Ohio Iowa and New Hampshire and substantially reduced advertising in four other states 374 On October 15 Biden and Trump hosted separate town hall speeches in lieu of a second debate 375 nbsp Trump at a rally in Omaha Nebraska on October 27On October 22 the candidates participated in a second and final debate in Nashville In contrast to the first debate the microphones of both candidates were muted at select times 376 Trump pressed Biden on renewed allegations that during his time as vice president members of his family had personally profited from his position in Ukraine and China to which Biden pointed out Trump s own scandals regarding those countries 377 Trump repeatedly asked why Biden had not delivered on his 2020 campaign promises during his eight years in the White House to which Biden responded we had a Republican Congress 378 On October 26 the Minnesota Department of Health linked 23 COVID 19 cases to three Trump rallies held in the state in September According to Johns Hopkins University the average number of new cases in Beltrami County where Trump s rally in Bemidji was held was 2 85 new cases a day but had risen to 14 57 new cases per day four weeks after the rally Minnesota traced one case each to a September 18 Joe Biden rally and an event on October 1 in Becker that was attended by Eric Trump 379 A campaign rally by Vice President Mike Pence in Hibbing in late October had more than 650 people in attendance exceeding Minnesota health guidelines to restrict crowds to 250 people At least five aides to Pence including his chief of staff Marc Short had tested positive only two days earlier National Security Advisor Robert O Brien called Pence an essential worker who needed to be out campaigning 380 Election Day and beyond edit Further information Post election lawsuits related to the 2020 United States presidential election and Republican reactions to Donald Trump s claims of 2020 election fraud Early on November 4 despite the fact that no clear winner of the election had been determined Trump declared victory from the White House stating that he did win the election At that point results from states such as Pennsylvania Wisconsin Michigan and Georgia were unclear 381 Although Trump was leading in the vote count of those states at the time experts believed that many of the still uncounted votes which included votes from large cities and mail in ballots would turn out to favor Biden 382 On November 5 a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit by the Trump campaign to stop vote counting in Pennsylvania The Trump campaign had alleged that its observers were not given access to observe the vote but during the hearing its lawyers admitted that its observers were already present in the vote counting room 383 Also that day a state judge dismissed another lawsuit by the Trump campaign that alleged that in Georgia late arriving ballots were counted The judge ruled that no evidence had been produced that the ballots were late 384 Meanwhile in Michigan a state judge dismissed the Trump s campaign s lawsuit requesting a pause in vote counting to allow access to observers as the judge noted that vote counting had already finished in Michigan 385 That judge also noted that the official complaint did not state why when where or by whom an election observer was allegedly blocked from observing ballot counting in Michigan 386 On November 5 the Trump Victory in Wisconsin group declared it would be chasing our absentee ballots over in Pennsylvania for people who had yet to vote Also that day the Kenosha for Trump group sent an email urging volunteers to make phone calls to Pennsylvania Trump supporters to return their absentee ballots However votes had to be postmarked by November 3 to count as legal votes in Pennsylvania and Trump himself has described late votes as election fraud 387 By November 6 a growing number of Trump officials had admitted that the incumbent s loss was probable 388 On that day election calling organization Decision Desk HQ forecast that Trump had lost the election to Biden 389 By November 7 news organizations ABC News Associated Press CBS News CNN Fox News NBC News Reuters and the New York Times forecast that Trump had lost the election to Biden 390 Still the president refused to concede The administrator of the GSA Emily W Murphy refused to authorize transition funds until November 23 391 392 Most Senate Republicans including Mitch McConnell claimed that the election was still unsettled 393 and Attorney General William Barr authorized the Justice Department to investigate alleged massive voter fraud prompting Assistant AG Richard Pilger director of the elections crimes branch in the Justice Department s Public Integrity Section to resign in protest 394 Reliable sources indicated that there were plans to resume full scale campaigning in conjunction with recounts in Arizona Georgia and Wisconsin 395 396 On the week of November 9 Trump indicated to Kevin Cramer that If this doesn t work out I ll just run again in four years 397 As repeated lawsuits failed throughout November Trump admitted to Fox News on November 29 that it s very hard to get a case to the Supreme Court 398 In an interview with the Associated Press published December 1 Attorney General William Barr acknowledged To date we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have affected a different outcome in the election 399 By January Trump had lost 60 lawsuits 400 Further information Trump Raffensperger phone call On January 2 2021 during an hour long conference call Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to change the state s vote totals by the 11 780 votes he needed to win the state During the call Trump falsely suggested that Raffensperger could have committed a criminal offense On January 11 the phone call was cited in a new article of impeachment introduced in the House of Representatives 401 nbsp Sign with Pence removed after Pence fell out of favor nbsp Sign for 2020 updated for 2024Self declared alternate electors voted in protest these votes had no legal validity 402 Well over a hundred Republican representatives promised to contest the counting ceremony at the U S Capitol on January 6 403 404 Experts debated whether Trump was trying to perform a self coup 405 406 Further information January 6 United States Capitol attack On January 6 2021 Trump spoke at a March to Save America rally on the Ellipse where he encouraged the crowd to fight like hell and said he would be marching with them to the United States Capitol although he did not join them in the end The rioters broke into the Senate Chamber where the electoral college ballots were being counted causing both the House and Senate to be evacuated Five people died from the events while dozens more were injured and the Federal Bureau of Investigation opened over 170 investigations into the events Polling editOpinion polls conducted in 2020 almost always showed Democratic nominee Joe Biden leading Trump nationally in general election matchups with the former vice president s advantage usually extending beyond the margin of sampling error 407 408 409 The Trump campaign dismissed polls throughout the election season noting how they erroneously predicted a Hillary Clinton victory in the 2016 presidential election 410 411 412 The sentiment has reflected a greater public distrust of polls in general with several studies including one by the Pew Research Center showing that even when Biden lead Trump by a significant margin nationally a majority of people still believed that Trump would win the election 413 After keeping pace with Biden and even leading him in some key states throughout the spring Trump s approval rating significantly weakened in June and July causing him to fall behind in most of those battleground states as well as states that historically vote Republican such as Georgia Texas and Kansas 71 72 73 By July 4 2020 Politico reported that Trump was trailing Biden by double digits in recent polls 414 A mid July Washington Post ABC News poll showed Biden s double digit lead holding 415 Trump however began to bounce back in early August A national poll conducted then showed Biden leading by just three percent nationally 416 Trump also began to improve in state polls such as in Iowa where a poll showed Trump leading Biden by 48 to 45 six percentage points less than Trump won the state with in 2016 but an improvement from where Trump s popularity was in the few months prior 417 Internal polls commissioned by the campaign showed Trump tied with or ahead of Biden in 17 key states 418 while a CNN poll showed Biden up by just one percentage point in 15 battleground states 419 Towards the end of the month though Biden s advantage began to grow again as Trump found himself down several points nationally in three highly rated polls Fox News who had Biden leading 49 to 42 420 the NBC Wall Street Journal who had Biden leading 50 to 41 421 and The Washington Post ABC News who had Biden up 53 to 41 422 Trump got a slight bounce following the 2020 Republican National Convention after which a Reuters Ipsos poll showed Biden s national lead reduced to seven points 413 By the end of August Trump was polling ahead of Biden in key states such as Ohio where he led 50 to 45 and was polling neck and neck with the Democratic candidate in other battleground states such as Florida 423 424 Trump s national polling numbers fell heavily again following his performance at the first presidential debate and his COVID 19 diagnosis at the end of September and beginning of October as Biden s lead returned to double digits regularly A Washington Post ABC News poll taken around this period showed Biden s lead to be 53 to 43 425 Trump however still managed to keep pace with Biden in the battleground states thus giving him an outside chance of retaining the Presidency via the Electoral College as Election Day approached Finances editTrump began fundraising for his reelection campaign immediately after his inauguration whereas his predecessors had waited years to do this 161 By September 2020 Trump s 2020 reelection effort including the Republican National Committee had spent over 800 million At that time Trump had not yet contributed any of his own money to his reelection effort although he was reportedly considering contributing 100 million He had by contrast contributed 66 million of his own money to his 2016 campaign Bloomberg News said it would be unprecedented for an incumbent president to put his own money toward winning a second term 426 427 Donald J Trump for President Inc quarterly financial summaries Quarter Cash on hand at beginning Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand at end Debts owed to campaign Debts owed by campaign2017 Q1 428 7 611 702 92 7 120 150 93 6 370 250 57 8 361 603 28 0 00 0 002017 Q2 429 8 361 603 28 7 954 888 84 4 369 374 54 11 947 117 58 0 00 0 002017 Q3 430 11 947 117 58 10 129 336 13 4 071 599 06 18 004 854 65 0 00 0 002017 Q4 431 18 004 854 65 6 895 755 62 2 791 451 84 22 109 158 43 0 00 0 002018 Q1 432 22 109 158 43 10 106 775 80 3 876 088 55 28 339 845 68 0 00 0 002018 Q2 433 28 339 845 68 8 368 358 11 3 621 333 93 33 086 869 86 0 00 0 002018 Q3 434 33 086 869 86 10 026 045 24 7 705 411 15 35 407 503 95 0 00 0 002018 Q4 435 35 407 503 95 6 946 974 43 23 061 577 18 19 292 901 20 0 00 1 035 597 65Total 2017 2018 436 7 611 702 92 67 548 285 10 55 867 086 82 19 292 901 20 0 00 1 035 597 652019 Q1 437 19 292 901 20 30 304 180 03 8 834 888 53 40 762 192 70 0 00 528 116 262019 Q2 438 40 762 192 70 26 516 845 63 10 541 672 69 56 737 365 64 0 00 294 070 292019 Q3 439 56 737 365 64 40 958 012 84 14 479 108 22 83 216 270 26 0 00 216 915 002019 Q4 440 83 216 270 26 45 980 113 53 26 410 679 60 102 785 704 19 0 00 170 377 552020 Q1 441 442 443 102 785 704 19 34 258 184 38 38 573 302 28 98 470 586 29 0 00 234 670 08Grand total 7 611 702 92 245 565 621 50 154 706 738 14 98 470 586 29 0 00 234 670 08Funding pace edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2019 nbsp Logo of the Trump Make America Great Again CommitteeAt the end of the first quarter of 2017 the campaign s three committees Donald J Trump for President Trump Victory and Trump Make America Great Again Committee reported raising a combined 13 2 million the majority of which had come from small donors 99 Trump s campaign and the Republican National Committee ultimately raised a combined 55 million in the first quarter According to the National Review s Kelly Jane Torrance Barack Obama and the Democratic National Committee had raised roughly 16 million in the same period of Obama s first term 21 On March 17 2017 the campaign saw what its highest single day contribution total was with the campaign and its joint fundraising committee raising a combined total of 314 000 444 445 By the end of May the RNC had raised more than 62 million in 2017 The RNC had already received more online donations than they had in the entire year of 2016 148 On April 14 2019 the campaign announced that it had raised 30 million in the first quarter of 2019 far outpacing the campaigns of his individual Democratic opponents in the same period Average donations were 34 26 and nearly 99 percent of donations to the campaign were 200 or less In addition the Republican National Committee brought in 45 8 million in first quarter 2019 446 Notable expenditures and allegations of grifting edit Trump properties edit In June 2018 ProPublica reported that Trump Organization properties had received at least 16 1 million from his campaign Republican organizations and government agencies since late 2015 447 In October 2019 OpenSecrets found that total spending on Trump properties had increased to 16 8 million even when just considering payments made by the Trump campaign and other Republican political campaigns and PACs leaving aside the government agencies 448 During the first three months of 2017 the Trump 2020 campaign reported spending 6 3 million of which nearly 500 000 over 6 of its spending was to companies owned by Trump 449 In the Trump 2020 campaign s first two years 2017 and 2018 it paid more than 890 000 in rent for space in Trump Tower 450 451 while the Republican National Committee paid 225 000 451 As of October 2020 the campaign s committees had directed more than 17 9 million of campaign donor money to Trump properties while the Republican National Committee had paid 3 0 million 452 453 Legal and compliance work edit In a period spanning 2015 2020 the Trump campaign including its 2016 and 2020 versions used at least 58 4 million of donor funds to pay for legal and compliance work This was more than 5 times what the Obama campaign and the Democratic National Committee had paid for legal and compliance work during an equivalent period eight years earlier Federal Election Commission filings do not reveal how much the Trump campaign spent on any specific case as contrasted with routine legal work 454 To look at a narrower slice of this spending in the third quarter of 2017 the Trump campaign spent 4 1 million 27 of its expenditures on legal fees including the personal legal expenses of Trump and his family 455 456 By this point 10 of the campaign s overall spending since the beginning of the year had been on legal fees 456 Advertisements edit As of March 2019 update Trump s campaign had spent almost twice as much on Facebook and Google ads as the entire Democratic field combined 457 Memorabilia edit During the first three months of his presidency his reelection campaign spent more than 4 million on memorabilia 21 Money funneled through Brad Parscale edit Between January 2017 and March 2020 Trump s reelection committees paid 38 9 million to companies owned by Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale In the analysis of Democratic political consultant James Carville They re all just fleecing the campaign Everybody is trying to take everything they can get on the way out 458 Former GOP strategist and Lincoln Project activist Rick Wilson noting that Parscale bought a Ferrari a Land Rover a waterfront house and a yacht said the campaign s leaders are taking Donald Trump to the cleaners 459 In April 2020 it was revealed that Brad Parscale was paying 180 000 per year to Kimberly Guilfoyle the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr and another 180 000 per year to Lara Trump wife of Eric Trump It s donor money said Paul Ryan an expert on campaign finance with the watchdog group Common Cause Parscale was paying these women through his company not through the campaign or the party I can pay them however I want to pay them Parscale told reporters Two anonymous Republicans in the White House suggested that the payments were deliberately made this way so the campaign did not have to report them Stuart Stevens a top aide in Mitt Romney s 2012 presidential campaign accused Parscale of being a money launderer 460 Groups supporting Trump editThe Republican Party edit On January 23 2019 the Republican National Committee in a unanimous vote informally endorsed the president 195 196 Super PACs edit Super PACs supporting Trump s reelection campaign include Committee to Defend the President 17 Great America PAC 17 and Great America Committee 461 462 The Great America PAC received donations from among others former racer Walker Evans 463 and Insperity executive Jay Mincks 464 The Committee to Defend the President PAC received contributions from among others Enterprise Products executive Ralph S Cunningham 465 The Center for Public Integrity published an analysis of 2017 first quarter federal campaign spending records which revealed that two Super PACs supporting Trump Great America PAC and Committee to Defend the President had spent a combined 1 32 million on the 2020 election campaign 17 Ted Harvey serves as the chairman of the Committee to Defend the President Eric Beach and Ed Rollins serve as co chairmen of Great America PAC 17 Both PACs have previously been accused by the FEC of poorly maintaining financial records and had been threatened with penalties 17 The Center for Public Integrity also found that several other pro Trump PACs had already been founded in 2017 but most of them had yet to be very active One such PAC was America First Action which was founded by the CEO of a political consulting firm for which Trump s 2020 campaign treasurer is the senior vice president 17 On May 17 2017 Mike Pence filed FEC paperwork to form Great America Committee a PAC that would be headed by his former campaign staffers Nick Ayers and Marty Obst 461 462 This is the first time in U S history a sitting vice president has founded such a political organization 461 On August 7 Marc Lotter a spokesperson for Mike Pence confirmed to MSNBC s Hallie Jackson that the vice president had hosted Republican donors including mega donors Charles and David Koch at Number One Observatory Circle 158 At the end of the third quarter the FEC calculated that in 2017 super PACS and other outside groups supporting Trump had spent more than 2 million 466 Amount spent by outside groups in support of campaign edit Table displays the amount that groups have reported to the FEC they have spent in support of Trump s candidacy from January 1 2015 to December 31 2020 467 Group AmountThe Committee to Defend the President 13 977 787 95Great America PAC 13 841 286 33Other 31 416 965 73Total 59 236 040 01Other groups edit In late January 2017 several members of Trump s 2016 campaign staff formed America First Policies a pro Trump political nonprofit Those involved included former deputy campaign chairs Rick Gates and David Bossie Brad Parscale 468 and Katrina Pierson were also involved Additionally involved were Nick Ayers and Marty Obst both of whom served as advisors to Mike Pence during the 2016 campaign 469 Trump s former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Katie Walsh has also joined the organization 121 Near the end of May members of the organization including Walsh participated in meetings at the RNC s D C offices with members Trump s family to discuss campaign strategy 121 122 In 2017 Matt Braynard a key member of Trump s 2016 campaign staff established the organization Look Ahead America 470 The organization took steps to target inactive voters in places such as New Hampshire 470 a state Trump came close to winning in 2016 470 Look Ahead America claimed it would not coordinate its efforts with the president 470 In the week after the 2020 election Braynard launched a group called The Voter Integrity Fund to review public records for indications of election malfeasance 471 On December 1 2020 he tweeted that Biden s election was illegitimate If the issues we raised are not resolved Biden cannot be considered president but should instead be referred to as the presidentialoccupant Trump retweeted Braynard s comment several hours later 472 In August 2018 a group called the 45 Alliance was formed All three of the group s officers had served on Trump s transition team and two of them also served in Trump s White House During the calendar year in which the 45 Alliance was formed it was entirely funded by Trump for America a nonprofit that supported Trump s transition 150 000 by America First Policies 150 000 and by the Republican National Committee 75 000 Neil Corkery is in charge of the 45 Alliance s finances He has ties to several high profile dark money operations Walker Davis wrote like the Wellspring Committee and Judicial Crisis Network In 2018 an anonymous million dollar contribution to President Trump s inauguration was linked to him 473 Black Voices for Trump was an initiative of the campaign which raised support for Donald Trump among African Americans 474 475 476 In August 2023 Harrison Floyd the executive director of Black Voices for Trump was charged with three felonies as part of the prosecution of Donald Trump in Georgia 477 Rallies editMain article List of post 2016 election Donald Trump rallies 2020 campaign rallies Date of rally City State Venue Estimated attendance SourceMonday February 11 2019 El Paso TX El Paso County Coliseum 6 000 478 Thursday March 28 2019 Grand Rapids MI Van Andel Arena 14 000 479 Saturday April 27 2019 Green Bay WI Resch Center 10 000 480 Wednesday May 8 2019 Panama City Beach FL Aaron Bessant Park Amphitheater Archived November 27 2020 at the Wayback Machine 7 500 481 Monday May 20 2019 Montoursville PA Williamsport Regional Airport 15 000 482 Tuesday June 18 2019 Orlando FL Amway Center 20 000 483 Wednesday July 17 2019 Greenville NC Williams Arena 8 000 484 Thursday August 1 2019 Cincinnati OH U S Bank Arena 17 500 485 Thursday August 15 2019 Manchester NH SNHU Arena 11 000 486 Monday September 9 2019 Fayetteville NC Crown Expo Center 5 500 487 Monday September 16 2019 Rio Rancho NM Santa Ana Star Center 8 000 488 Thursday October 10 2019 Minneapolis MN Target Center 20 000 489 Thursday October 17 2019 Dallas TX American Airlines Center 21 000 490 Tuesday November 26 2019 Sunrise FL BB amp T Center Sunrise Florida 20 000 491 Tuesday December 10 2019 Hershey PA Giant Center 12 000 492 Wednesday December 18 2019 Battle Creek MI Kellogg Arena 5 400 493 Thursday January 9 2020 Toledo OH Huntington Center 8 000 494 Tuesday January 14 2020 Milwaukee WI UW Milwaukee Panther Arena 12 000 495 Tuesday January 28 2020 Wildwood NJ Wildwoods Convention Center 7 500 496 Thursday January 30 2020 Des Moines IA Knapp Center 7 600 497 Monday February 10 2020 Manchester NH SNHU Arena 12 000 498 Wednesday February 19 2020 Phoenix AZ Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum 14 000 499 Thursday February 20 2020 Colorado Springs CO Broadmoor World Arena 8 500 500 Friday February 21 2020 Las Vegas NV Las Vegas Convention Center 15 000 501 Friday February 28 2020 North Charleston SC North Charleston Coliseum 13 000 502 Monday March 2 2020 Charlotte NC Bojangles Coliseum 10 000 503 Saturday June 20 2020 Tulsa OK BOK Center 6 200 504 Tuesday June 23 2020 Phoenix AZ Dream City Church 3 000 505 Monday August 17 2020 Mankato MN Mankato Regional Airport 506 Oshkosh WI Wittman Regional Airport 507 Tuesday August 18 2020 Yuma AZ Yuma International Airport 508 Thursday August 20 2020 Old Forge PA Mariotti Building Products 509 Friday August 28 2020 Londonderry NH Manchester Boston Regional Airport 510 Thursday September 3 2020 Latrobe PA Arnold Palmer Regional Airport 511 Tuesday September 8 2020 Winston Salem NC Smith Reynolds Airport 512 Thursday September 10 2020 Freeland MI MBS International Airport 513 Saturday September 12 2020 Minden NV Minden Tahoe Airport 514 Sunday September 13 2020 Henderson Xtreme Manufacturing 515 Thursday September 17 2020 Mosinee WI Central Wisconsin AirportFriday September 18 2020 Bemidji MN Bemidji Regional Airport 516 Saturday September 19 2020 Fayetteville NC Fayetteville Regional Airport 517 Monday September 21 2020 Vandalia OH Dayton International Airport 518 Swanton Toledo Express Airport 519 Tuesday September 22 2020 Moon Township PA Pittsburgh International Airport 520 Thursday September 24 2020 Jacksonville FL Cecil Airport 521 Friday September 25 2020 Newport News VA Newport News Williamsburg International Airport 522 Saturday September 26 2020 Middletown PA Harrisburg International Airport 523 Wednesday September 30 2020 Duluth MN Duluth International Airport 524 Monday October 12 2020 Sanford FL Orlando Sanford International Airport 525 Tuesday October 13 2020 Johnstown PA John Murtha Johnstown Cambria County Airport 526 Wednesday October 14 2020 Des Moines IA Des Moines International Airport 526 Thursday October 15 2020 Greenville NC Pitt Greenville Airport 527 Friday October 16 2020 Ocala FL Ocala International Airport 528 Macon GA Middle Georgia Regional Airport 529 Saturday October 17 2020 Muskegon MI Muskegon County Airport 530 Janesville WI Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport 531 Sunday October 18 2020 Carson City NV Carson City Airport 532 Monday October 19 2020 Prescott AZ Prescott Regional Airport 533 Tucson Tucson International AirportTuesday October 20 2020 Erie PA Erie International Airport 534 Wednesday October 21 2020 Gastonia NC Gastonia Municipal Airport 535 Friday October 23 2020 The Villages FL The Villages Polo Club 536 Pensacola Pensacola International AirportSaturday October 24 2020 Lumberton NC Robeson County Fairgrounds 537 Circleville OH Pickaway Agriculture and Event Center 538 Waukesha WI Waukesha County Airport 539 Sunday October 25 2020 Manchester NH Manchester Boston Regional Airport 540 Monday October 26 2020 Allentown PA HoverTech InternationalLititz Lancaster Airport 541 Martinsburg Altoona Blair County Airport 542 Tuesday October 27 2020 Lansing MI Capital Region International Airport 543 West Salem WI La Crosse Fairgrounds Speedway 544 Omaha NE Eppley Airfield 545 Wednesday October 28 2020 Bullhead City AZ Laughlin Bullhead International Airport 546 Goodyear AZ Phoenix Goodyear Airport 547 Thursday October 29 2020 Tampa FL Raymond James Stadium 548 Fayetteville NC Fayetteville Regional Airport 549 Friday October 30 2020 Waterford Township MI Oakland County International Airport 550 Green Bay WI Green Bay Austin Straubel International Airport 551 Rochester MN Rochester International Airport 552 Saturday October 31 2020 Newtown PA The Keith HouseReading Reading Regional Airport 553 Butler Pittsburgh Butler Regional Airport 554 Montoursville Williamsport Regional AirportSunday November 1 2020 Washington MI Michigan Stars Sports Center 555 Dubuque IA Dubuque Regional AirportHickory NC Hickory Regional AirportRome GA Richard B Russell Airport 555 Opa locka FL Miami Opa Locka Executive Airport 555 Monday November 2 2020 Fayetteville NC Fayetteville Regional AirportScranton PA Wilkes Barre Scranton International Airport 555 Traverse City MI Cherry Capital AirportKenosha WI Kenosha Regional AirportGrand Rapids MI Gerald R Ford International Airport 555 Technology editThe Trump campaign used geofencing This technology detects when a smartphone is within a narrow geographic area like a church or a sports stadium and it captures identifying information from that device This allowed political marketers to gather names addresses and voter registration status of the people who were present at the event and who presumably share some ideological religious or other demographic affinities In January 2020 The New York Times reported that the Trump campaign is far ahead of the Democratic Party in the use of this technology 556 See also editDonald Trump 2000 presidential campaign Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign Donald Trump 2024 presidential campaign Facebook Cambridge Analytica data scandal List of Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign endorsements List of Republicans who opposed the Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign Opinion polling on the Donald Trump administration Political positions of Donald Trump Presidency of Donald Trump White House COVID 19 outbreak 2020 Republican Party presidential primaries List of lawsuits relating to the 2020 United States presidential election Stop the StealNotes edit Informally announced on February 17 2017 a b On August 3 2020 Trump said he had the right to issue an executive order concerning mail in voting He elaborated We haven t got there yet but we ll see what happens 296 On August 4 he tweeted Whether you call it Vote by Mail or Absentee Voting in Florida the election system is Safe and Secure Tried and True Florida s Voting system has been cleaned up so in Florida I encourage all to request a Ballot amp Vote by Mail 297 A week later Trump reiterated that he would probably be giving his speech at the White House 313 The new citizens reportedly did not know their naturalizations would be televised Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf also denied such knowledge 323 Clarifying his comments the next day Trump said A person was on a plane said that there were about 6 people like that person more or less and what happened is the entire plane filled up with the looters the anarchists the rioters people that obviously were looking for trouble And the person felt very uncomfortable on the plane This would be a person you would know 328 References edit Wagner Meg Alfonso III Fernando Macaya Melissa Mahtani Melissa Rocha Veronica Wills Amanda November 7 2020 CNN Projection Joe Biden Wins the Presidency CNN Archived from the original on November 17 2020 Retrieved November 17 2020 Biden defeats Trump for White House says time to heal AP NEWS November 7 2020 Archived from the original on November 17 2020 Retrieved November 17 2020 Forgey Quint November 3 2020 Visiting campaign headquarters Trump says losing is never easy Politico Retrieved November 8 2020 a b c d Scott Eugene April 17 2017 Trump campaign raking in money for 2020 disclosures show CNN Retrieved April 27 2017 Trump s campaign committee has spent about 6 3 million during the first quarter of 2017 That includes giving more than 70 000 to the campaign committee s manager Michael Glassner who was Trump s deputy campaign manager and more than 40 000 to John Pence Vince sic President Mike Pence s nephew who serves as the committee s deputy director a b c d e f g Bender Michael C February 19 2019 Trump adds senior campaign staff for 2020 race as risk of a GOP primary challenger rises MarketWatch Retrieved March 6 2019 Trump campaign names Hogan Gidley as new press secretary CBS Lara Trump becomes face of Donald Trump s 2020 re election campaign The Daily Telegraph London October 19 2017 Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved April 23 2018 Don Jr s Girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle Lands Top Trump Campaign Role The Daily Beast Jenna Ellis a senior legal adviser to the Trump campaign is not the type of lawyer she plays on TV The New York Times December 3 2020 Will This Election Be A Replay Of Bush v Gore At The Supreme Court Not Likely NPR Trump campaign hires Katrina Pierson The Hill Bill Shine resigns from the White House to advise Trump s 2020 campaign CNBC Trump body man Johnny McEntee leaving White House for campaign Politico Trump campaign hires ex aide Jason Miller despite past scandals Politico Former Trump staffers consulting for president s reelect Politico Trump s Jewish point person President has fought anti Semitism everywhere and anywhere a b c d e f g Levinthal Dave May 5 2017 Pro Trump super PACs have already spent 1 million on Election 2020 Publicintegrity org The Center for Public Integrity Retrieved May 6 2017 Former Trump staffer who penned tell all book and sued the president back working on Republican Convention ABC Trump Donald J Candidate overview FEC gov FEC gov Retrieved November 9 2020 a b Tumulty Karen January 18 2017 How Donald Trump came up with Make America Great Again The Washington Post Retrieved March 5 2017 a b c Keep America Great Trump Reelection Effort Raised 13M So Far Report Says Fox News April 15 2017 Retrieved April 28 2017 Benen Steve March 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Supporters And Some Climate Change Deniers Rallied To Thank Him For Leaving The Paris Agreement Buzzfeed News Retrieved June 5 2017 Sheth Sonam June 3 2017 The White House hyped up a Pittsburgh not Paris rally and Trump skipped it to go to his golf club Business Insider Retrieved June 5 2017 Colarossi Sean June 3 2017 Trump s Pittsburgh Not Paris Rally A Massive Flop Compared To Nationwide March For Truth Politicususa com Retrieved June 5 2017 The Odds Of An Electoral College Popular Vote Split Are Increasing FiveThirtyEight November 1 2016 Retrieved June 8 2017 McDermott Monika January 5 2012 Iowa s bad track record for picking GOP winners CBS News Retrieved June 9 2017 For a few months every four years the state of Iowa becomes a focal point for the nation as it holds its first in the nation presidential nominating contest the Iowa caucuses Richardson Bradford August 17 2015 Iowa State Fair attendees pick Sanders over Clinton The Hill Retrieved June 9 2017 Edelman Adam June 7 2017 Trump touts 1 trillion infrastructure plan during Ohio speech Daily News New York Retrieved June 13 2017 telling a crowd of Cincinnati supporters that the U S deserves the best infrastructure in the world Trump s campaign style speech at the Rivertowne Marina Bedard Paul June 12 2017 It s on Trump to hit 2020 battleground states to pitch infrastructure jobs Washington Examiner Retrieved June 14 2017 Cedar Rapids Trump rally postponed The Gazette Cedar Rapids May 27 2017 Retrieved May 28 2017 Morin Rebecca May 15 2017 Trump cancels Iowa rally Politico Retrieved May 15 2017 a b c d Wagner John Parker Ashley June 20 2017 He loves rallies Trump Looks Beyond Washington for Support The Washington Post Retrieved June 28 2017 Diamond Jeremy June 21 2017 Trump set for victory lap at Iowa rally CNN Retrieved June 21 2017 a b c d Liptak Kevin June 28 2017 President homebody Trump stays close to the White House CNN Retrieved June 29 2017 Glueck Katie July 7 2017 How not to primary Donald Trump McClatchy Retrieved July 9 2017 Albert Tim June 22 2017 Iowa GOP Chairman Rips Arrogant Academic Ben Sasse Politico Retrieved July 9 2017 Chaitlen Daniel June 3 2017 Mike Pence and Sen Joni Ernst arrive at Iowa event riding motorcycles The Washington Examiner Retrieved June 5 2017 Boshart Rod May 11 2017 Vice President Mike Pence coming to Iowa The Gazette Retrieved May 28 2017 a b c Isenstadt Alex May 31 2017 Trump to hold reelection fundraiser in June Politico Retrieved May 31 2017 Bykowicz Julie June 21 2017 Trump to host Trump re election fundraiser at Trump hotel Associated Press Retrieved June 25 2017 a b Drucker David M June 21 2017 Trump kicking off 2020 fundraising with high dollar DC fundraiser Washington Examiner Retrieved June 25 2017 a b Squiteri Jason June 28 2017 Dem congressman Just plain wrong for Trump to hold fundraiser at own hotel CNN Retrieved June 29 2017 a b Isenstadt Alex June 28 2017 Trump rips media mocks Pelosi at closed door fundraiser Politico Retrieved July 9 2017 a b c Bykowicz Julie Colvin Jill June 29 2017 Trump trashes media cheers wins at 10 million fundraiser Associated Press Retrieved July 9 2017 Nuzzi Olivia July 9 2017 Scenes From the Swamp Almost Inside Trump s 35 000 Per Plate Reelection Fundraiser New York Retrieved July 10 2017 Man Anthony August 2017 Donald Trump s supporters in South Florida kick in cash for his re election Sun Sentinel Retrieved August 9 2019 Liptak Kevin Malloy Allie June 28 2017 White House disinvites press from fundraiser CNN Retrieved June 29 2017 President Trump s politicking raises ethics flags CNBC Associated Press July 28 2017 Retrieved July 9 2017 The New York Times Editorial Board June 30 2017 Mr Trump s For Profit Campaign The New York Times Retrieved July 7 2017 Glueck Katie June 7 2017 The face of Donald Trump s 2020 campaign McClatchy Retrieved June 11 2017 Figueroa Laura June 20 2017 Trump s daughter in law Florida guv headline GOP dinner Newsday Archived from the original on July 14 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Jeff Sessions at Ohio rally Fox News Retrieved July 26 2017 a b Merica Dan July 26 2017 Trump makes presidential pitch at Ohio rally CNN Retrieved August 17 2017 Huppke Rex W July 27 2017 Trump s abnormal behavior knows no boundaries Chicago Tribune Chicago Janssen Kim July 27 2017 Trump s message for Emanuel Get tough Chicago Tribune Chicago Langille Sean August 16 2017 Pro Trump Mother of All Rallies scheduled for September The Washington Examiner Retrieved September 16 2017 Shugerman Emily September 16 2017 Trump supporters organised a rally for 1 million people Only 1 000 turned up The Independent London ISSN 0951 9467 OCLC 185201487 Retrieved September 17 2017 a b Hughes Gray Ferrar Doug August 31 2017 Rally to support President Trump planned for Sept 9 in Georgetown The Daily Times DelmarvaNow Retrieved August 31 2017 Coles Caroline September 9 2017 Sussex County Republican Committee Sponsors Trump Rally WBOC TV Retrieved September 10 2017 a b c d Riotta Chris October 25 2017 Trump Flies to Texas For His Re Election Fundraiser and Writes It Off As Taxpayer Expense Newsweek Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Donald Trump to visit Dallas for fundraiser Dallas Morning News Associated Press October 9 2017 Retrieved October 9 2017 Hayes Christal October 16 2017 Trump Wants to Run in 2020 Election Against the Woman He Already Beat Hillary Clinton Newsweek Retrieved October 18 2017 Johnson Jenna October 25 2017 Trump in Texas I m the builder president Remember that The Washington Post Retrieved October 27 2017 Knoller Mark markknoller October 25 2017 By my count this will be Pres Trump s 10th political fundraiser since taking office 9 of 10 were closed to press coverage including today Tweet Retrieved January 6 2020 via Twitter a b Riotta Chris November 3 2017 Lara Trump Taking on White House Duties in Troubling and Unprecedented Move Officials Say Newsweek Retrieved November 20 2017 Schwarz Sam December 20 2017 Support for Donald Trump s Impeachment Is Higher Than His Re Election Chances Newsweek Retrieved February 16 2018 Cole Devan February 25 2018 Trump campaign emails photo of Parkland survivor asks for donations CNN Retrieved February 26 2018 Isenstadt Alex Samuelsohn Darren February 27 2018 Trump picks loyalist Parscale to run 2020 campaign Politico Retrieved February 28 2018 Jones Rhett February 27 2018 Trump s New Campaign Manager Is Already Facebook s Worst Nightmare Gizmodo Retrieved February 28 2018 Stewart Martina March 10 2018 Trump In Pennsylvania I Need Rick Saccone To Help Keep America Great NPR Retrieved March 11 2018 Breech John March 15 2018 Buccaneers owner hosts Donald Trump at home fundraiser just months after NFL spat Levin Bess March 14 2018 Trump 2020 Campaign Now Accepting All White House Rejects Vanity Fair Retrieved March 15 2018 Manchester Julia March 13 2018 Trump campaign hires Katrina Pierson The Hill Retrieved March 15 2018 Gray Kathleen Siacon Aleanna Egan Paul April 26 2018 Trump skips press dinner for rally I d rather be in Washington Mich than Washington D C USA Today Retrieved May 14 2018 McGraw Meredith May 14 2018 Trump stumps for Republicans and debuts new campaign slogan in Indiana ABC News Retrieved May 14 2018 a b Murphy Mike At Minnesota rally Trump brags he s more elite than the elite MarketWatch June 21 2018 June 23 2018 a b Sorkin Amy Davidson Never Mind the Children In Duluth Trump Celebrates Himself The New Yorker June 21 2018 June 23 2018 Salama Vivian Trump Tests His Appeal in Nevada a State Clinton Won subscription required Wall Street Journal June 23 2018 Retrieved June 24 2018 Rogers Katie Trump at the rally Vows to Carry On Anthony Kennedy s Legacy With Court Pick The New York Times June 27 2018 Retrieved July 1 2018 Cillizza Chris October 23 2018 Trump used a word he s not supposed to Here s why CNN Is Trump Transforming Midterms With Arena Size Rallies RealClearPolitics Retrieved February 5 2019 Groppe Maureen November 7 2018 President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence renew their political vows in advance of 2020 USA Today Retrieved November 7 2018 Merica Dan December 18 2018 Trump gears up for 2020 re election by tightening grip on party CNN Retrieved February 4 2019 Isenstadt Alex January 7 2019 Trump campaign moves to stave off mayhem at 2020 convention Politico Retrieved February 2 2019 a b Republican Party to Express Undivided Support for Trump VOA January 23 2019 Retrieved February 4 2019 a b Miller Zeke Peoples Steve February 4 2019 Trump campaign takes steps to prevent a challenge within GOP AP NEWS Retrieved February 4 2019 Miller Zeek Trump campaign takes steps to prevent a challenge within GOP ABC News Retrieved February 21 2019 Chappell Bill February 12 2019 Trump Supporter Violently Shoves BBC Cameraman At Rally In El Paso Texas NPR Lybrand Holmes March 2 2019 Fact checking Trump and others at CPAC CNN Re Gregg March 28 2019 Trump in fiery first rally since Mueller vindication calls on Dems to stop ridiculous bullsh sic Fox News Choi Matthew March 28 2019 Trump rips into pencil necked Schiff sick sick Democrats Politico Retrieved June 1 2019 Trump visits US Mexico border Live updates CNN April 5 2019 Nicholas Peter April 3 2019 Donald Trump s Never Ending Campaign Keeps Getting Angrier The Atlantic Morrissey Ruben Vives Alejandra Reyes Velarde Kate April 5 2019 Live Trump departs LAX for Las Vegas Los Angeles Times span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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