TRUMP HEADS TO THE BRONX: Supporters of Donald Trump — many clad in red and some holding “New York is Trump Country” signs — have been lining up all day in the South Bronx ahead of his campaign rally this evening. “President Trump is being welcomed with open arms,” Adam Solis of the New York Young Republican Club previewed in both English and Spanish in social media videos from Crotona Park. But can the presumptive Republican nominee for president win deep-blue New York? And can he win the Black and Latino voters he’s targeting with his remarks on inflation and crime? Highly unlikely, though Trump certainly wants to make a dent and an impression. The Bronx, heavily Democratic and heavily working class, is the borough where Trump saw the steepest increase in support in New York City between 2016 and 2020: 9.4 percent versus 15.7 percent. And recent public polls, including a New York Times/Siena College survey from March, have shown he’s making gains among African American and Latino voters. Trump’s campaign and his surrogates are arguing the Democratic Party has taken these voting blocs for granted and their quality of life has suffered under Democratic governance. Bronx Democrats, meanwhile, are reminding their neighbors what Trump actually stands for as the former president brings thousands of MAGA faithful to their borough. “I don’t think anything in Donald Trump’s history has ever supported claims that he’s going to work in favor of Black and Latino communities,” Assemblymember Kenny Burgos told Playbook. “The man has been a con artist since he’s been a public figure, and even as president, we’ve seen his actions in real-time from Puerto Rico’s hurricane crisis to his rhetoric overall about people of color, poor people.” Reps. Ritchie Torres and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have in recent days sought to counter-program the rally through local news media. “One of the reasons for the persistent poverty of the Bronx has been the far-right fanaticism that Trump himself embodies,” Torres wrote in a Daily News op-ed. “From the moment he entered politics, Trump has been waging war on the American poor, targeting anti-poverty programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which feeds 40 million Americans.” Ocasio-Cortez agreed that cost of living is crucial to Bronx residents but said it’s the Democrats who are leading the charge on affordability. “The cost of health care is so important to our folks — not just in the Bronx but across the city — making sure that we’re addressing the runaway housing crisis, the soaring cost of rent mortgages that I think is incredibly important, and of course, public safety issues, immigration,” she listed on PIX11. Trump’s appearance in the Bronx, his first in the city in eight years, comes ahead of next week’s closing arguments and jury deliberations in his Manhattan hush money trial. Ocasio-Cortez charged that his rally is more a “GoFundMe campaign” for his mounting legal bills than a political campaign. — Emily Ngo
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