Supporters arrive before Donald Trump spoke at a campaign event at the Butler Farm Show. (AP)
“You heard the shots. You saw the blood. We all feared the worst. But you knew everything would be OK when President Trump raised his fist high in the air and shouted, ‘fight, fight!'” Vance, who was chosen as his vice presidential nominee less than two days later, said.
“Now I believe it as sure as I’m standing here today that what happened was a true miracle.”
Billionaire Elon Musk is also expected to speak as the campaign elevates the headline-generating potential of his return in its tight race against Harris and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, left, and Donald Trump attend a campaign event at the Butler Farm Show, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024. (AP)
A billboard on the way into the rally said, “IN MUSK WE TRUST,” and showed his photo.
A massive crowd stood shoulder to shoulder from the stage to the press stand several hundred yards away at the event billed as a “tribute to the American spirit”.
Area hotels, motels and inns were said to be full and some rallygoers arrived on Friday.
Crowds were lined up as the sun rose today.
A memorial for firefighter Corey Comperatore, who died as he shielded family members from gunfire, was set up in the bleachers, his fireman’s jacket set up on display surrounded by flowers. His sisters were crying as speakers mentioned him.
There was a very visible heightened security presence, with armed law enforcers in camouflage uniforms on roofs.
“President Trump looks forward to returning to Butler, Pennsylvania to honour the victims from that tragic day,” Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said.
“The willingness of Pennsylvanians to join President Trump in his return to Butler represents the strength and resiliency of the American people.”
Trump’s plane did flybys over the venue before his arrival, drawing cheers from those gathered on the field below.
As spectators spotted Trump’s plane overhead, mobile phones popped into the air.
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Donald Trump boards his plane at West Palm Beach International Airport on Saturday. (AP)
Trump planned to use the 5pm local time event to remember Comperatore, a volunteer firefighter struck and killed at the July 13 rally, and to recognise the two other rallygoers injured, David Dutch and James Copenhaver.
They and Trump were struck when 20-year-old shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, opened fire from an unsecured rooftop nearby before he was fatally shot by sharpshooters.
The building from which Crooks fired was completely obscured by tractor trailers, a large grassy perimeter and a fence.
Most bleachers were now at the sides, rather than behind Trump.
How Crooks managed to outmaneuver law enforcement that day and scramble on top of a building within easy shooting distance of the ex-president is among many questions that remain unanswered about the worst Secret Service security failure in decades. Another is his motive.
Butler County District Attorney Rich Goldinger told WPXI-TV this week that “everyone is doubling down on their efforts to make sure this is done safely and correctly”.
Mike Slupe, the county sheriff, told the station he estimates the Secret Service, was deploying “quadruple the assets” it did in July.
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A Trump campaign rally at the Butler Farm Show on Saturday, the site where a gunman tried to assassinate him in July. (AP)
The agency has undergone a painful reckoning over its handling of two attempts on Trump’s life.
Butler County, on the western edge of a coveted presidential swing state, is a Trump stronghold.
He won the county with about 66 per cent of the vote in both 2016 and 2020.
About 57 per cent of the county’s 139,000 registered voters are Republicans, compared with about 29 per cent who are Democrats and 14 per cent something else.
Chris Harpster, 30, of Tyrone, Pennsylvania, was accompanied by his girlfriend on Saturday as he returned to the scene.
Of July 13, he said, “I was afraid” – as were his parents, watching at home, who texted him immediately after the shots rang out.
Heightened security measures were making him feel better now, as well as the presence of his girlfriend, a first-time rallygoer.
Harpster said he will be a third-time Trump voter in November, based on the Republican nominee’s stances on immigration, guns, abortion and energy.
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Harpster said he hopes Pennsylvania will go Republican, particularly out of concern over gas and oil industry jobs.
Other townspeople were divided over the value of Trump’s return.
Heidi Priest, a Butler resident who started a Facebook group supporting Harris, said Trump’s last visit fanned political tensions in the city.
“Whenever you see people supporting him and getting excited about him being here, it scares the people who don’t want to see him reelected,” she said.
Terri Palmquist came from Bakersfield, California, and said her 18-year-old daughter tried to dissuade her.
“I just figure we need to not let fear control us. That’s what the other side wants is fear. If fear controls us, we lose,” she said.
She said she was not worried about her own safety.
“Honesty, I believe God’s got Trump, for some reason. I do. So we’re rooting for him.”
But Trump needs to drive up voter turnout in conservative strongholds like Butler County, an overwhelmingly white, rural-suburban community, if he wants to win Pennsylvania in November.
Harris, too, has targeted her campaign efforts at Pennsylvania, rallying there repeatedly as part of her aggressive outreach in critical swing states.