Awaiting possible indictment, Trump rallies in Waco

Donald Trump will hold his first major rally of his 2024 presidential campaign in Waco, Texas on Saturday - with possible indictment looming over him.

WACO, Texas — Thirty years ago, federal agents were in the midst of the 51-day siege of a compound here occupied by cult leader David Koresh and his anti-government followers. The siege ended in a firefight on April 19, 1993, after Attorney General Janet Reno ordered the FBI to raid the compound.

On Saturday, former President Donald Trump, who has made a political art of railing about supposed government-run conspiracies to rob him of power and freedom, will hold here his first major rally of the 2024 presidential election cycle.

Along with the physical backdrop of this small city on the Brazos River, within a three-hour drive of Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Austin, Trump is surrounded by the prospect of indictments in Manhattan, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., over questions about his alleged hush money payment to a porn star, his efforts to overturn the 2020 election and the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

March 24, 202301:20

“Donald has a rally in Waco this Saturday,” Mary Trump, the former president’s niece and a vocal critic of his, wrote on Twitter. “It’s a ploy to remind his cult of the infamous Waco siege of 1993, where an anti-government cult battled the FBI. Scores of people died. He wants the same violent chaos to rescue him from justice.”

Trump has been railing against government officials investigating him, with increasingly dark warnings about what will happen if he is charged.

But much as it’s impossible to ignore the obvious spectacle of an anti-establishment candidate stoking thousands of his supporters at the site of a showdown between federal agents and anti-government conspiracy theorists, there are more traditional political reasons for Trump to pick Waco as the launch point for a new round of his trademark rallies.

As he seeks the GOP presidential nomination for the third time in a row, Trump and his team well understand the importance of Texas in delivering delegates to the Republican National Convention. The state is second only to California in the number of delegates available, and it will matter more to the final count than the first four early states — Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina — combined.

“It’s guaranteed to be a crowd for him and it’s part of I think the success they can have in going to red states,” said one former Trump campaign aide. “It is intimidating. It’s a show of force. Here’s 10, 15,000, whatever, people in a room and nobody else can do that.”

It also fits his basic pattern of picking sites that are outside major cities but accessible to them.

“President Trump is holding his first campaign rally in Waco in the Super Tuesday state of Texas because it is centrally located and close to all four of Texas’ biggest metropolitan areas,” Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said. “This is the ideal location to have as many supporters from across the state and in neighboring states attend this historic rally” as can make it.

Trump’s aides dismiss the possibility that holding a Waco rally during the 30th anniversary of the siege might show sympathy to anti-government voters.

“That sounds like stuff that people in New York or D.C. who have never even been to Texas would say,” said one Trump aide.


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