100000 tickets requested for Wildwood Trump rally, Van Drew says – Press of Atlantic City
Got a ticket to the Trump rally at the Wildwoods Convention Center next Tuesday?
So do more than 100,000 other people — and tickets are still being requested for a venue that holds about 7,400.
“This is going to be a little bit extreme because of how small the venue is,” Darwin Cooper, 30, of Vineland, said of making the cut and getting inside.
A big fan of President Donald Trump, this will be Cooper’s eighth Trump rally. Most venues are at least twice as big as Wildwood’s, he said.
“The campaign recommends getting to the venue as early as possible because admission is first come, first serve, but there will be two screens outside for those who don’t make it inside to watch the rally,” according to a Trump campaign spokesperson.
Cape May County Indivisible will host a protest rally Jan. 28 outside the Wildwoods Conventi…
The campaign is still telling those interested in attending Jan. 28 to request tickets at donaldjtrump.com.
“Some folks stay out overnight (waiting in line), and a majority of folks like myself get there 4:30 a.m. to 5 a.m.,” Cooper said when asked for advice on how to get in the doors.
“Just be prepared to wait outside six to 10 hours,” the real estate investor and house flipper said. “It’s hard on the body. You don’t move until the doors open up. Just imagine — I’m a young guy, and it’s very hard. You’re extremely tired at the end.”
The rally doesn’t start until 7 p.m., but venue doors open promptly at 3 p.m., Cooper said. Doors opened an hour or two early at only one of the rallies he’s attended, and only because it was raining.
New Jersey’s 2nd Congressional District was recently added to the list of Democratic Congres…
U.S. Jeff Van Drew, whose change from Democrat to Republican after voting against impeachment sparked the rally, has said more tickets have been requested for Trump’s Wildwood rally than for any other rally Trump has held.
Some folks will have to park pretty far away, said Cape May County Emergency Management Director Marty Pagliughi.
“They will be parking wherever they can on streets and in private lots that are opened up,” Pagliughi said. “We’re advising people to be prepared to walk.”
He said the city is expecting a crowd as big as the one for Tim McGraw in 2016, estimated at about 35,000.
Pagliughi does not yet know how Trump is getting to town or by what route, he said Tuesday. He’ll find that out just before the event in a meeting with Secret Service.
LOCATION: Wildwoods Convention Center, 4501 Boardwalk
For now, his office is rounding up resources from other counties and from the State Police and state Office of Homeland Security.
“We’ll be involved in working on the communications plan — all first responders are given assigned channels,” Pagliughi said. “We’ve been requesting traffic barriers from other counties and working closely with law enforcement.”
He said emergency management and Wildwood police have been in touch with other cities that have had rallies.
“We have a pretty good idea what to expect,”Pagliughi said.
WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-2nd, has higher-profile committee assignments now th…
Cooper recommends buying a cheap disposable chair to sit in while waiting in line, because you have to leave it outside.
Once through security, participants either decide to stand for the duration to get closer to Trump, or to sit in seats farther away.
“A lot of people rush right in and go straight down to the floor,” Cooper said.
That means he sits in line from about 5 a.m. to 3 p.m., then stands for four hours before the rally starts, and continues standing for another two hours while Trump and others speak.
“That’s a long, long day,” Cooper said.
He does it for the chance to see the president, learn new information and support Trump and the country, he said.
But also for the morale boost.
Congressional candidate Amy Kennedy, of Brigantine, has invited her Democratic primary oppon…
“You can be low and go to a Trump rally and be with fellow Trump supporters having a good time,” said Cooper, who first realized he was a Republican at age 16.
“I like the belief that if you work hard, the American dream is possible,” Cooper said. “It’s common sense.”
There are always protests inside the rally, Cooper said.
“The Trump campaign wants people to shout them out — chanting ‘Trump, Trump, Trump’ — until security removes them from the venue,” he said. “I’m expecting a decent amount of protesters,” because of Wildwood’s proximity to big urban centers and much of blue New Jersey.
“In other places — red places — I’d estimate (protesters make up) 5% to 10% (of people in the venue). You will see this will be a higher percentage.”
Only once did a rally he attended get canceled because of protesters, Cooper said. That was in Chicago, leading up to the 2016 election.
“Chicago was a madhouse,” he said. “A speaker from the campaign said, ‘Due to security reasons, Trump won’t be coming.’ The protesters had shut down the rally.”
But now that Trump is president, he has a lot more security, Cooper said.
Van Drew said South Jersey is proud to host Trump.
“It shows he cares about big towns, big cities and the little places,” Van Drew said.
REPUBLICANS
Incumbent: Jeff Van Drew
Congressman Jeff Van Drew, R-2nd, made national news in his freshman year in Congress, which he started as a Democrat and ended as a Republican.
Long known as a moderate in the state Assembly and Senate, many thought Van Drew would continue to be a solid Democrat who occasionally deviated from the party on issues like gun rights, after he was elected in 2018 to fill the seat of longtime Congressman Frank LoBiondo, a moderate Republican.
But right from the start, Van Drew set himself apart by voting “no” for Nancy Pelosi for Speaker — fulfilling a campaign promise but confusing those on the House floor. He was supposed to call out a name of someone for speaker, so his “no” vote was recorded as “present.”
Then he was one of the few Democrats calling for bipartisan compromise on a budget to end what became the longest federal government shutdown in history. Later, he visited the southern border and came back saying there was, indeed, a crisis there. He supported both some funding for a border wall, and increased funding for housing and services to undocumented migrants. Van Drew was also one of just two Demcorats to first vote against proceeding with an impeachment inquiry, and to vote against both articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.
And on Dec. 19, 2019, he announced his party change to Republican while sitting next to Trump in the Oval Office.
Brian Fitzherbert
Brian T. Fitzherbert, 30, of Egg Harbor Township, founded the Atlantic County Young Republicans and ran in 2018 in the Republican primary, but withdrew before the primary that was won by Seth Grossman.
Fitzherbert stresses his knowledge of technology and aviation as an advantage for him to help develop those industries in South Jersey. He is a Program Manager for defense contractor L3Harris, working on multimillion dollar programs for military vehicles. Previously, he developed drones, ground control stations, electronic warfare testers, simulators, and area attack weapons supporting the Warfighter at Textron Systems.
He graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, and completed his graduate studies at the Whiting School of Engineering at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, studying systems engineering and project management.
He has racked up endorsements from a wide variety of local officials, including former Assemblyman and Cumberland County Freeholder Sam Fiocchi and Northfield Mayor Erland Chau.
David Richter
David Richter, 53, the former CEO of Hill International in Philadelphia, is an engineer, lawyer and businessman. He recently moved to Avalon from Princeton, but summered much of his life in the Cape May County town.
“I understand what it takes to get things built,” said Richter. “In Congress, I plan to work hard to ensure the federal government is investing in South Jersey’s infrastructure — expanding our transportation network, keeping our environment clean and maintaining our coastline.”
Richter earned two bachelor’s degrees and a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania, as well as master’s degrees from Oxford and Harvard universities, he said.
He and his wife, Michelle, have been married for 20 years and have four daughters.
Bob Patterson
Patterson has homes in Haddonfield and Ocean City, and ran in 2018 against Congressman Donald Norcross, D-1st, in the district that covers Camden and its surroundings.
Patterson, a strong supporter of President Donald Trump, said he is running for Congress to protect conservative values and make South Jersey great again. His priorities are protecting American jobs, restoring manufacturing in South Jersey, ending unfair trade deals, and securing the nation’s borders.
Patterson recently worked in the Trump administration as a senior adviser and acting associate commissioner at the Social Security Administration. Prior to that he worked as vice president for government relations at the U.S. Business & Industry Council (USBIC), an organization committed to strengthening U.S. manufacturing and opposing unfair trade deals.
Ashley Bennett
Ashley Bennett, a Democrat elected to the Atlantic County Board of Chosen Freeholders in 2017, faces re-election in 2020 as she runs for the right to challenge Congressman Jeff Van Drew, R-2nd.
A psychiatric emergency screener at Cape Regional Medical Center, she decided to run for freeholder after the 2016 election of President Donald Trump, and in response to a Facebook posting by then-Atlantic County Freeholder John Carman. It was about the Women’s March in January that questioned whether the women would be home in time to make dinner. Bennett ran for and won Carman’s seat.
John Francis
West Wildwood Commissioner John Francis, 73, has a colorful and unusual biography, and he wrote about it in a book published by National Geographic called, “Planet Walker: 22 years of walking, 17 years of silence.” Francis spent many of his younger adult years refusing to ride in cars or other vehicles that use fossil fuels, after seeing the results of an oil spill on the Pacific coast. He also stopped speaking for 17 years, in order to learn to listen, he said. During that time, however, he earned a bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate, became an expert in oil spill cleanup, and worked for the Coast Guard. Now he travels the world as a motivational speaker, he said.
He learned in his silent travels about the interconnectedness of all issues, Francis said. “Really it’s all about people and how we treat each other. It’s going to manifest in the physical environment.” So he said his focus in Congress would not just be on environmentalism, but on human and civil rights, gender equality and economic equity and human relationships “as the foundation for what happens in the environment. You have to be really interested in everything.”
Brigid Callahan Harrison
Longport’s Brigid Callahan Harrison is a professor of politics and law at Montclair State University in Essex County. She has been endorsed for by State Senate President Steve Sweeney, by six of the eight county Democratic chairs in the Second Congressional District, and by others.
Long a commenter in the media about New Jersey politics, this is Harrision’s first run for office.
Amy Kennedy
Amy Kennedy, of Brigantine, is a former teacher and the wife of former Rhode Island Congressman Patrick Kennedy, with whom she has five children. She announced Jan. 6 she will run in the 2020 Democratic primary.
Kennedy, now a mental health advocate, said she and her husband have supported Van Drew in the past, “but he has clearly lost his way.”
“Our nation is in crisis. Our political system is in crisis. Our environment is in crisis,” Kennedy wrote in a press statement. “We have serious unaddressed needs in our schools and in our mental health and addiction system. Our economy, though strong, is not meeting the needs of the underserved and middle class.”
Jack Surrency
Jack Surrency, of Bridgeton, is a Democratic freeholder in Cumberland County.
He was first elected to the Bridgeton City Council in 2010 as part of a slate headed by Mayor Albert Kelly, and served on the Bridgeton Board of Education from 2002-2010, according to his resume.
He attended the Tuskegee Institute from 1976-1978, majoring in chemistry with a business minor. He also holds a master’s degree in Community and Economic Development from New Hampshire College in Manchester.
Robert Turkavage
Robert Turkavage, 64, is a former FBI agent and manager out of New York. He has recently switched parties to become a Democrat, after a lifetime in the GOP.
Turkavage last ran in the 2018 Republican primary for the 2nd District race, losing to Seth Grossman, and this time is running as a Democrat.
He changed his party affiliation because the Republicans have increased the national debt by $3.1 billion as a result of tax cuts that benefited the wealthy, he said, and because of Prseident Trump’s attacks on the press and the intelligence community.
“It’s going to be challenging,” Turkavage said Tuesday of breaking through in a crowded Democratic field. “I will be knocking on doors every day from January till primary day” on June 2.
Will Cunningham
Will Cunningham, 34, a native of Vineland who has worked for Sen. Cory Booker, D-NJ, and now works for the House Oversight Committee in Washington, D.C., announced Jan. 8 he was entering the Democratic primary for the 2nd Congressional District.
He ran against Van Drew in the Democratic primary in 2018, and said he has the most experience in Washington, D.C., of all the candidates in the race of either party.
Cunningham said he was homeless for a time as a teen when his mom lost her job. He said his mom is still an hourly worker in Cumberland County, making $11.50 an hour. Yet with hard work and the help of government programs, he was able to get an Ivy League college education at Brown University. He also has a law degree from the University of Texas at Austin.
“Despite my accomplishments, I have not lost touch with how folks struggle to make ends meet,” Cunningham said. “I don’t have to look far.”