âThe Trump phenomenonââthe former presidentâs ability to draw large, loyal, enthusiastic crowdâsets him apart as an unusual politician, a professor says.
WILDWOOD, N.J.âA near-fatal car crash left Edward X. Young with debilitating injuries, persistent pain, and a shattered lifelong dream.
But the aftermath of that 2015 wreck also transformed Mr. Young into one of the most ardent supporters of Donald Trump, who became Americaâs 45th president. The Republican former president is now aspiring to unseat Democrat President Joe Biden and become the nationâs 47th president.
Large scale rallies have been a hallmark of the Trump campaign since its infancy. Although some people claim to have attended more than 100 of these events, Mr. Youngâs journey to 77 Trump ralliesâand countingâstands out because of the way it began.
The frequency, size, and enthusiasm of the former presidentâs crowds reflect âthe Trump phenomenon,â as political history professor Jeff Bloodworth calls it.
âHe is the political sun around which all American politics revolves, for better or worse,â Mr. Bloodworth, who teaches at Pennsylvaniaâs Gannon University, told The Epoch Times. âHe has a very large reservoir of supporters who donât just vote for him. … They turn out and they go to these events.â
The only other comparable politician in recent years was Democrat presidential candidate Barack Obama. During his successful 2008 campaign for the presidency, he drew âenormous crowds,â Mr. Bloodworth noted.
Former President Trump acts as âthe connective tissueâ that binds his supporters together, Mr. Bloodworth said, making each rally âmore than just a political event.â
Mr. Young agrees.
Brush With Death on a Foggy Night
Events leading to his political activism began just before midnight on May 31, 2015, Mr. Young told The Epoch Times.
He was driving along New Jerseyâs Pulaski Skyway bridge, shrouded in fog. Suddenly, he saw a stopped vehicle in front of him. He stomped on the brake pedal.
But Mr. Youngâs black Mercury Milan slammed into the motionless car.
The impact broke his arm, leg, and three ribs. It also damaged eight discs in his spine, he said.
And this misfortune struck a few weeks before the New Jerseyan was supposed to relocate to California; Mr. Young, who had played roles in independent films, says he had lined up a dream job as a Hollywood actor.
âI had my life set,â Mr. Young said.
The wreck plummeted Mr. Young to his lowest point. Four years earlier, his wife had died of cancer, leaving him a childless widower.
Now, because of the crash, Mr. Young was âstuck in Jersey.â As he began two years of physical therapy, he had no idea what type of work he might do; he felt rudderless.
He said he remembers thinking, âGod must hate meâ and âIâve got no purpose in life.â
That changed two weeks later.
Moment of Inspiration
While recuperating at University Hospital in Newark, New Jersey, Mr. Young saw something on TV that filled him with hope.
He watched as real-estate mogul Donald Trump rode down a golden escalator at Trump Tower, his New York business headquarters, and announced he wanted to become president.
Those now-famous remarks on June 16, 2015, resonated with Mr. Young.
Besides feeling depressed about his own hardship, Mr. Young said he was distressed over the direction America was heading. He felt particularly troubled by illegal immigration, one of the main issues that the future president addressed.
âTrumpâs speech made me believe it was possible for America to thrive,â Mr. Young said.
He recalls telling a friend: âWhen I get out of this hospital, I donât want you driving me home right away. … Youâre driving me to New York City, to Trump Tower, because I want to go in there and get one of those hats, one of those Trump hats.â
Since then, the red ball caps with âMake America Great Againâ in white letters have become known as âMAGA hats.â
Still on crutches, Mr. Young hobbled onto a train, through New York City, and into Trump Tower.
Inside, as he was purchasing a MAGA hatâthe first of about 30 he now ownsâthe clerk noted how much effort the injured man made to get there.
Mr. Young replied, âI wish I could work for the campaign.â Seeing that he was serious about that intention, the woman agreed to make some inquiries for him.
âAnd I get interviewed and vetted, and about six weeks later, they said, âYour background checks out; youâre welcome to be part of the campaign,ââ Mr. Young recalled.
Thus began months of talking to people across the nation via phone banks that were set up inside Trump Tower, he said, estimating he was among about 100 volunteers.
âWorking for Trump gave me a new reason to live,â Mr. Young said. âI never made it to Hollywood, but I found meaning in working for Trump.â
Mr. Young said he believes he made about 50,000 phone calls for the Trump campaign. A Trump spokesman did not respond to The Epoch Timesâ attempt to verify Mr. Youngâs past involvement with the campaign.
Political Involvement Continues
After the campaign was over and President Trump was serving in the White House, Mr. Young sought elected office in Ocean County, New Jersey, where he lives.
However, he lost a 2018 school board race amid controversy over his roles in low-budget horror films. Mr. Young says the scenes that some people considered offensive did not involve him and were added later.
Since then, Mr. Young said he remains politically involved because he is convinced that one person can make a difference. He said he has always believed in voting; now 64, he says he has only missed casting a ballot in one election when he had trouble getting to the polls. He previously didnât consider himself closely aligned with any specific party but now considers his values to be firmly Republican.
Mr. Young, who works for a debt-relief service, continues suffering pain from the crash; he walks with difficulty but says he is âtoo proudâ to rely on a cane.
He has frequently given media interviews at the Trump rallies he has attended, mostly in the eastern United States, located closer to his New Jersey home.
The Epoch Times first encountered Mr. Young on May 10, in Wildwood, N.J., on the eve of his 76th Trump rally.
On that day, Mr. Young was wearing his two trademarks: a blue denim jacket covered with pin-on buttons memorializing his Trump rallies and a green MAGA hat that he wears chiefly because it stands out in a sea of red ones.
Friends from as far away as Germany have noticed that hat in TV footage of Trump rallies; some refer to Mr. Young as âthe Green MAGA Hat Guyâ on social media. He said he gets a kick out of that.
Admitting he has a flair for the dramatic because of his background as an actor, Mr. Young called the former president âthe worldâs greatest showman,â and said the entertainment is one factor that inspires him to attend so many rallies.
But he also said he thinks the events are important. He thinks they help correct misperceptions of the former president.
Many news media outlets seem to manipulate or slant coverage to reflect badly on former President Trump, Mr. Young said; the in-person campaign stops are âthe only way President Trump gets his message outâ directly to the people.
And, he said, the rally attendance helps âprove that the American people support him.â
The former presidentâs campaign has often touted the size of his rally crowds as evidence of his appeal. Some detractors allege the attendance numbers have been exaggerated at times. Others see the turnout and the fervor as indicators of a âcult-like mentalityâ among the former presidentâs followers.
Mr. Bloodworth, the Pennsylvania professor, said that while some of the former presidentâs hardcore devotees âcan be a bit zany,â thatâs probably not the norm.
The use of terms such as âcult-likeâ arises from ârank snobbery,â Mr. Bloodworth said. âItâs a total way to just dismiss Donald Trump and his followers and to not try to understand the motivation behind that.â
Itâs important to acknowledge, he said, that âthere is something in Trumpism beyond the antics and the crowd size and outrageous statements. Thereâs more to it than that.â
Mr. Young summed up his participation as a mega-MAGA fan: Although Trump rallies are a lot of fun, filled with camaraderie, he thinks âour country is dying.â
âI come to these rallies,â he said, âbecause I leave with enough optimism to carry me to the next one.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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