Too close for comfort: Trump, Beto O'Rourke hold dueling El Paso rallies

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By Dareh Gregorian

President Donald Trump and Beto O’Rourke are speaking less than half a mile — but worlds apart — from each other on Monday night.

And hours before the dueling El Paso events, the president started in on his potential 2020 challenger.

“We have a line that is very long already, I’m mean you see what’s going on,” Trump told reporters in Washington before departing for Texas, referring to people waiting to get into his “Make America Great Again” campaign rally. “And I understand our competitor’s got a line too, but it’s a tiny little line. Of course (the media) make it sound like they have more people than we do. That’s not going to happen.”

Trump is expected to reiterate his call for a wall or barrier on the southern border and echo the statements he made in his State of the Union address last week.

“The border city of El Paso, Texas, used to have extremely high rates of violent crime — one of the highest in the country, and considered one of our nation’s most dangerous cities,” Trump said then. “Now, with a powerful barrier in place, El Paso is one of our safest cities.”

Less than a half mile away from Trump, O’Rourke, the former El Paso congressman and possible 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, responded at the “March for Truth: Stop the Wall, Stop the Lies.” The march will end in a rally where O’Rourke said residents will “celebrate our community” and “tell the true story about the border.”

“While some try to stoke fear and paranoia, to spread lies and a false narrative about the U.S.-Mexico border and to demand a 2,000 mile wall along it at a time of record safety and security, El Paso will come together for a march and celebration that highlights the truth,” O’Rourke’s office said in a statement last week.

“Nobody tells our story better than we do,” O’Rourke told NBC News in El Paso just ahead of the Trump rally. “It’s incredibly important that this community stand up to be counted, to tell the story and to make sure that we set the record straight. That this is, as you know, a march for truth…we are here to follow the lead of this great community and make sure the country sees us at our best.”

Asked how he’d respond if the president called him names at his Monday night event, O’Rourke laughed. “I really don’t care about that,” he said.

On their Facebook page, organizers urged attendees to “Wear white,” Try to carpool or use rideshare,” and “Bring a positive poster.”

The march will proceed along a section of fencing before ending in a rally at the Chalio Acosta Sports Center, less than half a mile from the 11,000-seat El Paso County Coliseum, where Trump is slated to speak. A large “Finish the Wall” banner was being hung in the coliseum Monday morning.

Pro-Trump vendors were set up across the street Monday morning from where O’Rourke will be speaking, but the area isn’t big Trump country. Trump won Texas by nine points in the 2016 election, but he lost El Paso County by 43 points — 69 percent to 26 percent.

Organizers were still anticipating a big Trump crowd, and scores of people were camped out in line more than 12 hours before the rally was set to start.

The president’s trip is designed to rally public support for his call for a wall along the southern border. Democrats have refused his demand for $5.7 billion in funding for the wall, which Trump had said during the presidential campaign that Mexico would pay for. The impasse helped lead to the longest shutdown in government history — and has stoked fears the government could shut down again after Friday, when the current spending deal expires.

Rep. Beto O’Rourke, D-Texas, speaks at a campaign rally in Austin on Sept. 29, 2018.Drew Anthony Smith / Getty Images file

Trump has pointed to El Paso as proof that “walls work,” and said that the barrier that was built there in 2008 and 2009 transformed it from one of the country’s most dangerous cities to one of the safest.

His campaign put out a video on Monday that it said featured El Paso residents praising the wall. “They put the fence up and ever since then, the crime rate has gone down dramatically,” said one.

Trump’s claims have led to bipartisan pushback from El Paso politicians, who pointed to statistics that the city of 700,000 was never one of the country’s most dangerous — and it had already transformed itself into one of the safest by the time wall was built.

“El Paso was NEVER one of the MOST dangerous cities in the US. We‘ve had a fence for 10 years and it has impacted illegal immigration and curbed criminal activity. It is NOT the sole deterrent. Law enforcement in our community continues to keep us safe,” Mayor Dee Margo, a Republican, tweeted after the State of the Union.

The county commissioners passed a resolution on Monday complaining that Trump had “continuously made inaccurate claims about the United States’ southern border, including El Paso,” and saying they’re “disillusioned by President Trump’s lies regarding the border and our community.”

Violent crime in El Paso peaked in 1993, but has been cut in half since, reaching its lowest point in 2006, before the wall was built.

There were 19 murders and 1,819 aggravated assaults in the city in 2017, according to FBI crime data. The murder rate is about half that of the national average.

O’Rourke tweeted that “we will meet lies and hate with the truth and a positive, inclusive, ambitious vision for the future.”

Courtney Buble and Ali Vitali contributed.

source: nbcnews.com