Air Force One swoops into South Carolina as voters head to the polls
After a week filled with Democratic rallies, town halls, get-out-the-vote efforts and one frantic, cacophonic televised debate, it was all over in South Carolina but the voting late Friday, save for one last election-year inevitability: a visit from Donald Trump.
On the eve of Saturday’s final primary vote before Super Tuesday, Air Force One swooped in to the Palmetto State for one of the U.S. president’s trademark Keep America Great rallies, attracting legions of Trump devotees, some of whom waited for hours in long, snaking lineups outside the North Charleston Coliseum.
“I’m 56 years old, and I may never get this opportunity again,” said Robin Moses, a devoted supporter who turned out with her husband, Gary, to brave the crowds in order to see Trump for the first time in person.
“To have a president come this close to me and me not even try — well, it just wouldn’t be American.”