Trump rallies MAGA base in historic visit to New York battleground district

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SUFFERN, N.Y.— For the first time since Gerald Ford stumped at the Rockland County Courthouse nearly half a century ago, a sitting president set foot in one of New York’s most competitive congressional districts — and Rep. Mike Lawler made sure everyone knew it.
President Trump’s visit to Rockland County on Friday, orchestrated by the two-term Republican congressman who represents a district where half of households include a first responder or veteran, signaled the White House’s willingness to invest political capital in a suburban battleground that could determine control of the House in November.
Mr. Trump used the rally to advocate for the voter ID-focused “Save America Act” legislation, extol the provisions in the Big Beautiful Bill Act that he signed last year, and laud Mr. Lawler and Bruce Blakeman, who is the New York GOP gubernatorial nominee. The president promised to turn around New York with their help.
“I cut your taxes and cut the taxes on workers, families, small business, who are the soul of the state. And I made special promises that I would save thousands of dollars a year by restoring SALT, and we did that,” said Mr. Trump, referring to the increase in the State and Local Tax deduction.
Mr. Lawler, whom Mr. Trump refers to as “Mr. Salt,” championed the SALT deduction increase, quadrupling the cap from $10,000 to $40,000, a provision he described as delivering tax relief to more than 90% of constituents in his district.
Mr. Lawler said he convinced Mr. Trump, despite a skeptical Senate, to persuade House Speaker Mike Johnson to “give him all the SALT he wants” for New York.
“Donald Trump is a New Yorker at heart,” Mr. Lawler said. “He understands toughness. He understands strength. He understands that sometimes you need to dig in and fight for what you believe in, even when it’s easier to quit.”
White House spokeswoman Liz Huston told The Washington Times that Mr. Trump’s visit to New York was intended “to highlight his strong record of making life more affordable for working families” and how “he and Republicans in Congress delivered the largest middle-class tax cuts in history.”
His constituents, Mr. Lawler said, many of whom lined up outside the door of the Rockland Community College Field House, were excited to see the president in what is considered one of the most vulnerable GOP districts in the country.
“The Democrats have called me ’MAGA Mike’ in every election, and some Republicans call me a RINO [Republican In Name Only]. That being said, look at me, I am who I am. And when I agree with the president, I say it. When I disagree with him, I say it,” Mr. Lawler said.
Although a handful of anti-Trump protesters who made their voices known were swiftly removed by law enforcement, Trump supporters at the rally were fired up, wearing the usual red MAGA caps and chanting “USA.”
Mr. Lawler won his seat in November 2022, defeating former Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Sean Patrick Maloney. He won reelection in November 2024, defeating Democrat Mondaire Jones by seven percentage points.
Cait Conley, Beth Davidson, Effie Phillips-Staley, and three other candidates are running in the Democratic primary for New York’s 17th Congressional District on June 23.
Ahead of Mr. Trump’s visit to Rockland County, New York State Democratic Party Chairman Jay S. Jacobs said Mr. Trump is ensuring that Mr. Lawler is “tied to his toxic agenda that is jacking up the cost of living, ripping away healthcare, and making New York communities less safe and prosperous.”
“New York Democrats will win up and down the ballot this November to hold Trump and his enablers in D.C. accountable for rubber-stamping his destructive MAGA agenda,” he said.
Mr. Lawler’s district covers all of Rockland County, Putnam County, largely Northern Westchester County and parts of southern Dutchess County —essentially the lower Hudson Valley suburbs north of New York City.
The district sits at about 38-42% Democratic registration, 26-30% Republican and 25-30% unaffiliated, with Democrats holding a raw registration advantage of roughly 10-15 points.
The Cook Partisan Voter Index for the district is D+1, meaning it voted about 1 point more Democratic than the national average across the 2020 and 2024 presidential elections — placing it as the 201st most Democratic district nationally.
In 2024, Vice President Kamala Harris won the district 50%-49%, and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a Democrat, won it 55%-45%.
NY-17 is one of only three districts across the country with a Democratic Cook rating that presently has elected a Republican.
The others are Nebraska’s 2nd congressional district, represented by retiring Rep. Don Bacon, and Pennsylvania’s 1st congressional district, where Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick holds the seat.
These three were also the only congressional districts that voted for Ms. Harris in 2024 while simultaneously electing a Republican to the House.
“But fundamentally, he’s the president of the United States. And if he’s coming to your district, you show up, you engage. And I think it’s a great opportunity for the people of Rockland County…and you can see the enthusiasm. People are excited to hear from him,” Mr. Lawler said.
Despite the tough district, Mr. Lawler has managed to build a loyal following of local supporters across the political spectrum, known for delivering dynamic constituent services and being a scrappy retail politician.
Charles Bridgets, 81, a retired restaurant manager, told The Times that Mr. Lawler is a “small town politician.”
“I like Mike Lawler because he’s good to the local businessman. We had a big construction project at Route 9W… small mom-and-pop businesses were hurt by it,” he said.
“He went out I don’t know what, got a million dollars or whatever for them to take care of it. I consider him a small-town politician. Shows up at mom-and-pop stores, shows up at diners, shows up at football games, To me he’s just a good guy,” he said.
Disability policy advocate Nathaniel Gabaronski, 40, told The Times, “There’s even Democrats that are going to be voting for Lawler come November.”
“Even if someone does come and challenge him, his constituent services are probably one of the best in the country. When he goes to the floor and talks, he’s not following think tanks. He’s following constituent demands and concerns about this district,” he said.
Annemarie Buffa, 79, of New City, who is president of her local senior club where Mr. Lawler is expected to speak soon, called him a “smart man” who is “very accommodating” towards his constituents.


