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Donald Trump will hold a rally in Iowa on Saturday, the first in the state since the 2020 election.

Donald Trump at a rally in Perry, Georgia, on September 25, 2021.

Donald Trump at a rally in Perry, Georgia, on September 25, 2021.

Photo: Sean Rayford / Getty Images

The ex-president Donald trump go back to Iowa Saturday night for his first visit to the state after losing his 2020 elections, according Des Moines Register.

And according a poll from Des Moines Register / Mediacom Iowa may be that Trump welcome: more residents of that state feel more supportive of the former president than ever. The poll showed that 53% of respondents have favorable opinions of Trump, and among Republicans it is 91%.

Hours before the demonstration to be held to promote Republican candidates for the 2022 elections, thousands of supporters and merchants selling paraphernalia of Trump they were waiting for him at the Iowa State Fairgrounds.

Trump was last in Iowa in October 2020 to appear at rallies in Dubuque and Des Moines ahead of the November presidential election.

Getting to Illinois so far ahead of the race for the 2022 elections it is primarily for the purpose of meeting with voters and laying the groundwork for a possible campaign.

Former President Trump won Iowa electoral votes with 53%, and obtained 18 electoral votes, Because state Republicans won state legislature seats, held one Senate seat, and won two House seats previously held by Democrats.

The top Republican leaders of Iowa will be presented together with Trump at the rally on Saturday, including the governor Kim Reynolds, the american representatives Ashley Hinson and Mariannette Miller-Meeks and the senator Chuck grassley, who recently announced that he would seek re-election in 2022.

Unsubstantiated claims about the outcome of the 2020 elections

On the journey of Trump to Iowa can be expected to continue to promote the false claims that he often makes about electoral fraud in the 2020 elections.

No hthere is evidence of electoral fraud in the 2020 elections, but the inhabitants of that state continue to ask about it in the new electoral rallies, according NPR.

At an election rally for Senator Chuck Grassley in rural West IowaIn September, a man in the audience told the senator that did not trust the outcome of the elections. “I feel in my heart that there were many traps,” said the man.

Grassley did not correct the claim. Instead, he defended the elections of Iowa and he criticized the plan by Congressional Democrats to reform the federal ballot.

Kedron Bardwell, political science professor at Simpson College, told NPR that Trump he has managed to get disinformation to take over the Republican Party. “You can’t put genie back in the bottle, in terms of once this accusation is unleashed,” Bardwell said. “And once a large percentage of the Republican base believes it, there is no going back.”

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