JD Vance Crowd Size Comes Under Scrutiny After Photo Goes Viral

The crowd size attending a JD Vance event in Michigan is coming under scrutiny on social media, after the Republican Vice Presidential candidate spoke outside a trucking company in Byron Center Wednesday. Some folks have posted photos of a small crowd, with a few empty chairs. One picture doing the rounds, with multiple empty chairs
JD Vance Crowd Size Comes Under Scrutiny After Photo Goes Viral

The crowd size attending a JD Vance event in Michigan is coming under scrutiny on social media, after the Republican Vice Presidential candidate spoke outside a trucking company in Byron Center Wednesday.

Some folks have posted photos of a small crowd, with a few empty chairs.

One picture doing the rounds, with multiple empty chairs, was reportedly taken a few hours before the event started, before the full audience had arrived, according to multiple people, including journalist and Democrat-supporter Kelly Scaletta.

Indeed, a livestream recording posted by APN shows almost every seat filled by the time Vance takes the stage.

That said, the number of seats available in the first place seems to be fairly small, with Scaletta estimating there were 200 chairs.

Smaller events in rural areas often only have a few hundred attendees. Byron Center, in Kent County is fairly suburban–and is near the larger city of Grand Rapids.

Newsweek has contacted Vance via email, to ask for confirmation on how many people attended and for any comment.

Supporters cheer for JD Vance as he speaks at a campaign event at Byron Center in Michigan, on Wednesday. Several folks on social media are questioning the crowd size at the event. AP

During his speech, Vance spoke about “taking back the White House” and “restoring the whole country,” starting in the state of Michigan.

He also threw his support behind several candidates for Michigan district representative candidates.

It comes as Vance is yet to 100 percent confirm that he will debate his Democratic counterpart Tim Walz in a debate on CBS News on October 1.

On Wednesday, the network posted an invitation to both men, giving them two dates in September and two dates in October to debate in New York City.

Walz responded on X, formerly Twitter, saying: “See you on October 1, JD.”

Later on, Vance told Fox News he had only been asked about the debate three hours before chatting to Fox, when he was landing from Michigan. He went on to say he “strongly suspects he will be there on October 1, but he wants to make sure certain conditions are met first.

He said: “I strongly suspect we’re going to be there on October 1, but we’re not going to do one of these fake debates, Laura, where they don’t actually have an audience there, where they don’t actually set the parameters in the right way where we can have a good exchange of ideas.

“In other words, we’re not going to walk into a fake news media garbage debate, we’re going to do a real debate and if CBS agrees to it, then certainly we’ll do it.”

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Police probing Southport knife rampage at Taylor Swift-themed dance class are given more time to quiz suspect, 17, arrested on suspicion of murdering three little girls and harming eight others
Read More

Police probing Southport knife rampage at Taylor Swift-themed dance class are given more time to quiz suspect, 17, arrested on suspicion of murdering three little girls and harming eight others

Detectives investigating the mass stabbing at a Southport Taylor Swift-themed holiday club that left three children dead have been granted more time to question the 17-year-old suspect. Merseyside Police confirmed that officers had asked magistrates for more time to question the teenager, who cannot be named because of his age. The law allows officers up to
IOC Blasts Gender Tests at Center of Gender Controversy: ‘The Whole Process Is Flawed’
Read More

IOC Blasts Gender Tests at Center of Gender Controversy: ‘The Whole Process Is Flawed’

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has slammed the procedures and the motivation of the testing procedures behind the International Boxing Association’s (IBA) gender test of Olympic fighters Imane Khelif (Algeria) and Lin Yu-Ting (Taiwan) in 2023. In 2023, the IBA President Umar Kremlev explained his organization’s decision to disqualify Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting and Algeria’s Imane