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Lee Zeldin sends a crucial message to New Yorkers from the swing-state campaign trail

lee-zeldin-sends-a-crucial-message-to-new-yorkers-from-the-swing-state-campaign-trail
Lee Zeldin sends a crucial message to New Yorkers from the swing-state campaign trail

WAUKESHA, Wis. — Lee Zeldin may not be repping the Empire State in Congress anymore, but after zigzagging the country making swing-state stops on the Team Trump Bus Tour, he has a message for New Yorkers: Though they live in a deep-blue state, their votes will truly count this November.

The ex-rep was stumping for former President Donald Trump in heavily Republican Waukesha County when The Post caught up with him last month.

“Just like New Yorkers are hoping for Republicans to get out the vote in swing states, the swing states —they’re hoping New Yorkers get out to the polls because the pathway to the majority in the House runs through New York,” Zeldin said.

Of the presidential race in the swing states he’s been visiting?

“It’s close,” Zeldin said demurely. “I’m someone who operates like we’re 2 points behind no matter what the polls say.”

Former President Donald Trump shaking hands with Lee Zeldin at a campaign event on a farm in Smithton, PA, in front of a blue sign

Zeldin, seen with the ex-prez last month at a Pennsylvania farm, has been touring swing states to stump for Trump. AP

That’s a wise modus operandi for the Republican who came within 6 points of unseating Gov. Kathy Hochul in 2022.

Since then, Zeldin has rallied around Trump, endorsing the fellow New Yorker early in the primary campaign, despite previously saying he wanted a robust GOP primary.

Lee Zeldin, former U.S. Representative, speaking at Donald Trump's presidential campaign rally in Indiana, Pennsylvania on September 23, 2024

Zeldin told The Post swing-state voters want New Yorkers to turn out to keep the House in GOP hands. REUTERS

Vice President Kamala Harris waving while boarding Air Force Two at Joint Base Andrews, heading for the U.S.-Mexico border in September 2024

Zeldin told the Wisconsin crowd that when Harris talks about what she would do if given the opportunity to serve in the White House, he would remind her she flew in Air Force Two to get to the rally where she says it. AP

Zeldin talked strategy in an interview with The Post after his Waukesha speech, which emphasized the country is watching Wisconsin, and the boots on the ground in battleground states should be trained on turning out low-propensity voters.

“We don’t want to go back to one-party Democratic rule,” he said.”The Democrats could have control of the House, Senate and White House if voters decide to stay home.”

He told The Post that when it comes to issues, Trump has the clear advantage.

“Undecided voters care about the border, the economy and crime. President Trump is on the right side of those issues versus Kamala Harris.” 

Still, the campaign is reportedly focusing more on attorneys and poll workers and outsourcing its ground game.

“Every day the ground game continues to get stronger,” Zeldin insisted. “There are a lot of door knocks occurring now in battleground states that weren’t happening a few months back.”

He added the campaign has had even more signups for volunteer attorneys and poll workers recently.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump, as Republican presidential nominee, standing in front of rolls of paper at FALK Production in Walker, Michigan during a campaign stop on September 27, 2024.

Although Trump used to criticize early voting, his campaign is pushing it across the swing states. REUTERS

Former Rep. Lee Zeldin speaking on stage at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 2024

Zeldin urged Wisconsin Republicans to get out the vote. Getty Images

Traffic passing by the Waukesha County sign on State HWY-67 at Evergreen Rd, Wisconsin on Sept. 7, 2024.

Waukesha County, where Zeldin spoke, has been a longtime Republican stronghold. Scott Ash / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

In his speech that evening, Zeldin addressed another common GOP concern: early voting.

“The rules are the rules,” he told the Waukesha crowd, while conceding he’s no fan of the state’s early-voting laws and unmanned ballot drop boxes.

“Ballots have started to go out in the swing states. November 5 is not an election day. It’s the last day to vote. It’s election season now,” he told The Post.

“We New Yorkers watch the swing states like all eyes are on them, and the swing states mean everything. And on the ground in swing states they’re hoping New Yorkers will get out and vote.”

Seven of New York’s 26 congressional seats are in competitive races, according to the Cook Political Report.

The Team Trump Bus Tour stop took place in the Republican stronghold of Waukesha County, where Trump won 59.7% to Joe Biden’s 38.9% in 2020.

Recent polling from the New York Times and Sienna College shows the race between Trump and Harris has tightened in the battleground state, with Harris at 49% to Trump’s 47%.

Zeldin slammed the VP for her part in the past three-and-a-half years in his speech and promised his Republican crowd a new way forward. In doing so, he even borrowed some of the veep’s favorite turns of phrase.

“Kamala, we will be unburned by what has been,” Zeldin told the laughing crowd, before continuing to riff on one of her campaign slogans.

“We are not going back, we are going forward with Donald Trump and J.D. Vance.”

Zeldin is headlining the Pennsylvania GOP fall dinner Friday in Harrisburg, and after that he’ll join the Team Trump Bus Tour in Atlanta. The ex-rep will join Trump in Florida Monday for an Oct. 7 remembrance event.

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