The other protest: Pro-Trump truck makes stop at youth summit on climate and conservation

The Trump truck was parked Wednesday morning on Main Street in Concord, the stateโ€™s capital, outside a theater hosting the NH Youth Climate and Clean Energy Town Hall. Photo/Erick Trickey

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CONCORD, NH โ€” While college students interviewed presidential hopefuls at a town hall on energy and climate change, supporters of President Donald Trump staged a high-wattage protest outside. Giant flatscreens, attached to a pro-Trump PACโ€™s black truck, flashed TV news clips meant to embarrass leading Democratic candidates.

The Trump truck was parked Wednesday morning on Main Street in Concord, the stateโ€™s capital, outside a theater hosting the NH Youth Climate and Clean Energy Town Hall. News footage of presidential candidates including Elizabeth Warren flashed on the truckโ€™s sides, but most of the clips focused on Joe Biden, including vintage clips of the former vice-president addressing the plagiarism scandal credited with knocking him out of the 1988 presidential race. Seven Trump supporters gathered around the truck, waving Trump signs.ย 

โ€œInvestigation: Hunter Bidenโ€™s Foreign Deals,โ€ read the banner from an ABC News clip playing on the black truckโ€™s sidesโ€”hours before the Senate acquitted Trump on two impeachment articles, including the abuse of power charge involving Ukraine, Joe Biden, and his son.ย 

The truck belonged to a pro-Trump PAC, the Committee to Defend the President.

โ€œWeโ€™re outside of the Democratsโ€™ โ€˜climate changeโ€™ event in Concord today offering up free hamburgers,โ€ the PACโ€™s Twitter feed, @Defend_Trump, said this morning.

The climate town hall, sponsored by Dartmouth College and other nonpartisan hosts, featured New Hampshire students asking questions of five presidential candidates, including a Republican, former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld, whoโ€™s challenging Trump in New Hampshireโ€™s Feb. 11 Republican primary.ย 

Like Democratic candidates who spoke, Weld criticized Trumpโ€™s record on environmental reform. Last year, Weld noted, the Trump Administration proposed allowing more emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas.ย 

โ€œAs so often, he has figured out the wrong thing to do and then doubled down on it,โ€ Weld said of Trump. โ€œIf he keeps his platform to one word, hoax, then he doesnโ€™t have to build up any solid base of knowledge about the issue.โ€

Outside the theater around lunchtime, a Trump supporter announced the offer of free hamburgersโ€”prompting a shouting match between him and a bullhorn-wielding supporter of perennial presidential candidate Vermin Supreme, with members of the New Hampshire Sierra Club, holding โ€œVote for our future: act on climateโ€ signs, caught in the middle.

โ€œStop socialism. Stop the Squad. Vote Trump,โ€ read some Trump supportersโ€™ signs. โ€œThe Squad: Ruling the Democrats, controlling the agenda,โ€ read another, which featured photos of first-term US Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashia Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley, and Ilhan Omarโ€”all women of color, and frequent targets of vicious Trump attacks โ€”next to smaller photos of Biden, Warren, Bernie Sanders, and Pete Buttigieg.

Donna Sellers of Bristol, New Hampshire, who joined the pro-Trump protesters with her 12-year-old daughter, expressed disinterest in climate change.

โ€œI donโ€™t really feel it should be that big an issue,โ€ Sellers said. Environmentalists in the U.S. should โ€œconfront Chinaโ€ about its carbon emissions, she said, and the federal government should seek to curb carbon emissions with incentives, not punishment.

The Committee to Defend the President has spent more than $4 million in the 2020 election cycle as of late October, on projects including a drive to register pro-Trump voters. It began as an anti-Hillary Clinton PAC in 2013. Within minutes of US Sen. Mitt Romneyโ€™s announcement today that he would vote to convict Trump of abuse of power, the PAC posted a Facebook message calling him a โ€œRINOโ€ and demanding his resignation.ย 


This article was produced by the Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism as part of its Manchester Divided coverage of political activity around New Hampshireโ€™s first-in-the-nation primary. Follow our coverage @BINJreports on Twitter and at binjonline.org/manchesterdivided, and if you want to see more citizens agenda-driven reporting you can contribute at givetobinj.org.


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