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Open war between Trump and his native New York

On November 8, 2016, Donald Trump was going to vote in Manhattan under the whistles. Four years later, the unpopularity of the New York businessman in his hometown turned into open war, with verbal battles, budget cuts and multiple legal attacks.

As the presidential election approaches, the Republican president attacks the first American metropolis, a Democratic bastion, almost daily. “New York, California, Illinois: people fleeing, taxes and crime skyrocket, VOTE TRUMP, I’m going to change that, and quickly,” he tweeted on Monday, before adding Tuesday, “New York.” Vote Trump, what (heck!) Have you got to lose? “

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During the debate against Joe Biden last Thursday, he called New York a “ghost town” given the thousands of well-off residents who have left and the office districts deserted for fear of the coronavirus.

“Look at what is happening to my wonderful city. For years, I adored her, she was dynamic, now she is dying, everyone is leaving New York, ”he said.

“The only ghost town will be Mar-a-Lago (Trump’s residence in Florida, editor’s note), where you will be forced into retirement after the election,” Democratic mayor Bill de Blasio retorted on Twitter, while New- Yorkers quipped by posting memes and photos of busy streets.

Donald Trump “is hated in this city by most people, except maybe those with the money,” said Susan Levin, 74, retired this week after voting Joe Biden early.


New York nevertheless has pro-Trump “pockets”, notably on Staten Island, or in several districts of Queens and Brooklyn. In some neighborhoods with large Orthodox populations, the president’s pro-Israel policies have contributed to his popularity. And the main New York police union, the SBA, is calling for him to be re-elected.

Everyone expects, however, that Donald Trump, the first New York-born American president since Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919), will be rejected by an overwhelming majority by his hometown, as in 2016, when 79% of New- Yorkers voted Hillary Clinton.

The billionaire may have his name on skyscrapers and hotels in Manhattan, having designed the reality TV show “The Apprentice” which made him known in the country, the New York elites “never have it. accepted, ”said Kenneth Scarlett, marketing executive in Manhattan.

Above all, “his presidency is the antithesis of everything New York stands for – openness and people of all backgrounds working together for the common good,” says Matt Eldridge, 33, an economist.

As soon as he arrived at the White House, Donald Trump encouraged a hardening of migration. New York, like other large Democratic cities, declared itself a “sanctuary” city, refusing to collaborate with the ICE migration police. The Trump administration retaliated by announcing the withdrawal of certain federal subsidies, the start of a legal saga.

Today, there are many other disputes between Donald Trump and the New York authorities, including the Manhattan prosecutor’s battle to obtain the president’s tax returns.

In this context, the Republican’s visits to New York have become extremely rare: the president prefers his New Jersey golf club to his luxurious triplex in the Trump Tower. The 5th Avenue skyscraper, home of the Trump Organization, has become the rallying point for many protests.

The pandemic has exacerbated tensions. Hard hit in the spring, the authorities still keep “the city that never sleeps” under cover. To the chagrin of a president who wants to see the economy pick up quickly.

The mayor and the Democratic governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, have also been calling for months the president and the Republicans to replenish their coffers, in the face of the deficit in tax revenues generated by the pandemic. In vain, raising the threat of drastic reduction in public services.

If Donald Trump is re-elected, this budget feud could worsen. In September, the president placed New York on a list of “anarchist” cities, which could lead to the cancellation of other federal grants.

At issue: homicides and shootings on the rise since the demonstrations against police violence and racial inequalities, even if crime remains low compared to the 80s and 90s.

Under these conditions, no one imagines Donald Trump moving back to New York.

Mar-a-Lago, Florida became his official residence at the end of 2019. And it was in this key state that he voted early on Saturday.

“He is like the rejected lover,” according to Kenneth Scarlett. “He wanted New York’s adulation and, since he didn’t get it, now says he never wanted it.”

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