Here's the details on Kommie's rally. I only posted the first half. The rest of it yammers on about which streets opened and closed and traveling to DC, blah blah. Here's the link below.
Vice President Kamala Harris will deliver her closing argument to voters Tuesday evening just a short walk from the White House. The D.C. rally on the Ellipse may attract more than 52,000 people, D.C. Chief of Police Pamela Smith said Tuesday morning that organizers told her. Overflow crowds...
www.nbcwashington.com
Harris rally expected to draw more than 50K to downtown DC
Vice President Kamala Harris will deliver her closing argument to voters
Tuesday evening just a short walk from the White House.
The D.C. rally on the Ellipse may attract more than 52,000 people, D.C. Chief of Police Pamela Smith said Tuesday morning that organizers told her.
Overflow crowds will be directed to the northeast grounds of the Washington Monument.
The Ellipse is where former President Donald Trump held his Stop the Steal rally on Jan. 6, 2021, shortly before members of the audience stormed the Capitol.
The
number of expected attendees swelled from 8,000 on the initial permit, and the Harris-Walz campaign was advertising the event on social media platforms such as Instagram as of Sunday morning. The initial permit was amended, according to the National Park Service.
Harris is working to turn the election into a referendum on the Trump era, which she will lay out as a decade of division and chaos, a senior Harris campaign official
told NBC News.
Trump will deliver remarks Tuesday evening in Allentown, Pennsylvania, which his campaign billed as his final message to voters.
Attendees can enter the gates starting at 3 p.m.
Preparations on the Ellipse were underway over the weekend, with crews readying fencing, protective flooring and more.
Those hoping to attend were told to RSVP on the Harris-Waltz campaign website. The gates are expected to open at 3 p.m. and
Harris is expected to start her speech at 7:15 p.m. The event is set to end at about 9 p.m.
Harris will aim to address voters' economic concerns and highlight her specific proposals aimed at lowering costs, strengthening the middle class and raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy,
according to a campaign official.