Full Video: Trump Speaks in Ottumwa, Iowa (Oct. 1)

Former President Donald Trump was back in Iowa Sunday speaking at a Commit to Caucus event in Ottumwa.

Here are all the details on Trump’s campaign rally today with supporters and volunteers in Iowa including start time, live stream, and how to watch.

Trump Delivers Remarks at Iowa Commit to Caucus Event in Ottumwa, Iowa
When: Sunday, Oct. 1, 2023
Time: 3:30 pm ET (2:30 pm CT)
Where: Bridge View Center in Ottumwa, Iowa
Full Video: Watch Below

Full Video: Trump Speech in Ottumwa, IA (Oct. 1)

Watch the full video below provided by RSBN and Rumble:

Alternate Stream Links: RSBN-TV

As noted by the Ottumwa Courrier, the region of the state Trump is visiting may be key to his strategy in the state caucuses and the general election next year:

Former President Donald Trump heads to southeast Iowa Sunday in the middle of a fall campaign push aimed at locking in supporters with large organizing events.

As he has with his other recent travels to the leadoff caucus state, Trump will campaign in an area that formerly supported Democrats but has embraced him.

Trump was planning to headline an afternoon event in Ottumwa, where his campaign was expecting more than 1,000 potential supporters. The small city is a hub in eastern Iowa and the seat of Wapello County, one of 31 counties Trump carried in 2016 that Democrat Barack Obama had won four years earlier.

Trump, the first Republican to capture the county since the Eisenhower administration, campaigned the week before in northeast Iowa. There, he drew about 1,400 to rural Jackson County along the Mississippi River and almost 2,000 to Dubuque County to the north. Like Wapello, Dubuque County had been a Democratic stronghold for decades before 2016.

Trump’s set to speak at 3 pm ET. Follow the Trump rally and event schedule for details on all upcoming Trump campaign stops.


Nate Ashworth

The Founder and Editor-In-Chief of Election Central. He's been blogging elections and politics for over a decade. He started covering the 2008 Presidential Election which turned into a full-time political blog in 2012 and 2016 that continues today.

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