NEWS

Trump's Gettysburg address outlines first 100 days

Dustin B Levy
dlevy@eveningsun.com
GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump addresses the crowd at Eisenhower Hotel in Gettysburg just after noon on Saturday, Oct. 22, 2016.

In a building named for Dwight Eisenhower and on the land forever tied to an Abraham Lincoln speech, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump aimed to join their ranks as the 45th Commander in Chief with a policy speech outlining his first 100 days in office.

With a few weeks left in the 2016 election and behind in the polls to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, Trump focused his speech on specific plans to ramp up support in a crucial swing state on a Saturday morning at the Eisenhower Complex in Gettysburg.

The setting contrasted the raucous rallies associated with the Trump campaign, instead opting for a more intimate environment with about 300 invited supporters and volunteers.

"It's my privilege to be here in Gettysburg, hallowed ground where so many lives were given in service for freedom," Trump began. "Amazing place."

Trump called Lincoln's presidency an instance of great division in the country and repeatedly referenced the "of the people, by the people, for the people" line in the Gettysburg Address throughout his remarks.

"It is my hope that we can look at (Lincoln's) example to heal the divisions we are living through right now," he added.

Before laying out his plans, Trump listed the obstacles he is facing in a "rigged system," including allegations of voter fraud, Clinton's eligibility as a candidate and the "dishonest mainstream media," topics that garnered supportive cheers from the audience.

Trump also acknowledged the women who have recently come forward to allege sexual misconduct against him.

"Every woman lied when they came forward to hurt my campaign," said Trump, adding that he plans to sue them after the election.

Fred Jenkins and other supporters of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump await Trump's arrival at the Eisenhower Hotel in Gettysburg on Saturday, Oct. 22, 2016.

Trump's policy talk veered from immigration to education to investment in the military, points well received by the crowd. With a tone decidedly even-keeled, he listed his potential actions in each category.

"Radical Islamic terror is right around the corner," Trump said as he proposed suspension of immigration from terror-prone regions.

The speech also included Trump's ideas for cleaning up government corruption, such congressional term limits and bans on lobbying practices in Washington, D.C.

"This is my pledge to you," Trump concluded as the crowd rose to its feet. "And if we follow these steps, we will once more have a government of, by and for the people. We will make America great again."

The speech, an hour later from its proposed start time, lasted less than 45 minutes. Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who introduced Trump, blamed the delay on weather conditions.

Trump's supporters in attendance were thrilled by the opportunity to see him in person and noticed the local theme in his remarks.

"Based on Trump's speech, it was not an accident he chose to come to Gettysburg," John Minton, of Aspers, said.

Betsy Hower, chairwoman of the Adams County Republican Committee, wore a white button that read, "I'm a 'deplorable' Trump supporter."

"It blew me out of the water," Hower said of Trump's appearance in Gettysburg. "Never did I think it would happen."

John Lucas, of Perry County, had opportunities to attend larger Trump events closer to where he lives, but wanted to attend the speech in Gettysburg because of its focus on policy.

"I like what I've heard," he said. "Those are the policies I'm looking to see implemented."

Lucas singled out Trump's plans for national security, education and congressional term limits as ideals he supported, adding he's been "very concerned" with the direction the country has been going.

For Minton, it took some time to warm to Trump as a choice for president, but he maintained that Trump's lack of political experience is what can solve many of the country's problems.

"There wasn't anything he said that I disagreed with in principle," Minton said.

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Minton named the support of the military politicians like Giuliani, as well as Trump's promise to slash federal regulations, as reasons for his vote in this election.

Rita Tuchalski, of Gettysburg, said she was motivated by Trump's stances on jobs and sanctuary cities as well as the prospect of a Clinton defeat.

"When you're a supporter of somebody and they tell you exactly what you want to hear, it makes you support them even more," she said.

The Clinton campaign responded to Trump's remarks on Saturday.

"Over the last few weeks, Donald Trump has further proven that he is temperamentally unfit and dangerously unqualified to serve as president and Commander-in-Chief," stated Corey Dukes, the Clinton campaign state director. "His unprecedented refusal to say he will accept the election's result and his rhetoric and actions that degrade and demean women have shown that he has built his divisive campaign on tearing our country apart."

But for some, the Trump campaign represents an agent of change in a country headed down the wrong path.

"I don't want to end up with a country that's an echo chamber of what it used to be," Minton said.

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