The Harris campaign rejected Trump’s comments, writing on X, “This is an actual photo of a 15,000-person crowd for Harris-Walz in Michigan.”
Trump, the Republican nominee for president, for years has been focused on crowd size as a metric of success. He has repeatedly taken to social media to boast about how the size of crowd he could draw and last week asserted at a news conference that “nobody’s spoken to crowds bigger than me”.
Trump has previously claimed that the audience for a speech he gave in Washington on January 6, 2021, the day a mob stormed the US Capitol, eclipsed the numbers who attended Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech despite photographic evidence that it did not.
Trump has regularly been challenged by fact-checkers and opposition groups for elevating discredited allegations, repeating unfounded rumours as fact, or grabbing onto conspiracies, especially when under political threat.
In 2016, he falsely claimed then-president Barack Obama was not born in the United States and did not attend Columbia University, that Trump’s taxes were audited because he is Christian, that vaccines are connected to autism and that climate change is a hoax.
In 2020, he refused to advocate for wearing masks during the coronavirus pandemic, and promoted unfounded claims about purported risks.
The Washington Post Fact Checker team in January 2021 noted that it had logged “30,573 untruths during his presidency – averaging about 21 erroneous claims a day”.
Trump’s focus on crowd size also has become something that the Harris campaign has used to poke fun at Trump about, while at the same time bragging about their own crowds.
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz at a Friday night rally with Harris, looking at an audience in Arizona that Democrats estimated at more than 15,000, quipped, “It’s not as if anybody cares about crowd sizes or anything.”
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On Sunday afternoon, the Harris campaign released a statement describing a crowd of “more than 12,000 Nevadans” at a rally over the weekend – “one of the largest political rallies in modern Nevada political history” – and then described previous audiences as including “14,000+ in Philadelphia, 12,000+ in Eau Claire, and 15,000+ in both Detroit and Arizona”.
And at a fundraising event in San Francisco on Sunday, Harris appeared to address Trump’s social media accusations indirectly.
The energy around the country was “undeniable”, Harris said, adding, “The press and our opponents like to focus on our crowd size, and yes, the crowds are large.” But even better, she said, was that attendees were signing up for volunteer shifts by the thousands.
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