Passage to India: Trump ready for embrace, adulation

FILE- In this Feb. 19, 2020, file photo, a monkey sits on a hoarding showing India Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump welcoming Trump ahead of his visit to Ahmedabad, India. President Donald Trump is ready for a king's welcome as he head to India on Sunday for a jam packed two-day tour. The visit will feature a rally at one of the world's largest stadiums, a crowd of millions cheering him on and a lovefest with a like-minded leader during an election year. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki, File)
FILE- In this Feb. 19, 2020, file photo, a monkey sits on a hoarding showing India Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump welcoming Trump ahead of his visit to Ahmedabad, India. President Donald Trump is ready for a king's welcome as he head to India on Sunday for a jam packed two-day tour. The visit will feature a rally at one of the world's largest stadiums, a crowd of millions cheering him on and a lovefest with a like-minded leader during an election year. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — A rally at one of the world’s largest stadiums. A crowd of millions cheering him on. A love fest during an election year.

President Donald Trump’s packed two-day visit to India promises the kind of welcome that has eluded him on many foreign trips, some of which have featured massive protests and icy handshakes from world leaders. He is expected to receive a warm embrace from Prime Minister Narendra Modi, complete with a massive rally soon after his arrival today and then a sunset visit to the Taj Mahal.

After hosting Modi at a “Howdy Modi” rally in Houston last year that drew 50,000 people, Modi will return the favor with a “Namaste Trump” rally (translating to “Greetings, Trump”) at the world’s largest cricket stadium in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad. Tens of thousands are expected to line the streets.

Modi “told me we’ll have 7 million people between the airport and the event,” Trump said to reporters Tuesday, then raised the anticipated number to 10 million when he mentioned the trip during a Thursday night rally. Indian authorities expect closer to 100,000.

“I’ll never be satisfied with a crowd if we have 10 million people in India,” Trump said. And as he left the White House on Sunday for the flight to India, the upcoming spectacle was on the president’s mind again: “I hear it’s going to be a big event. Some people say the biggest event they’ve ever had in India. That’s what the prime minister told me — this will be the biggest event they’ve ever had.”

Trump’s motorcade will travel amid cheers from carefully picked and screened Modi loyalists and workers from his Bharatiya Janata Party. They will stand for hours alongside the neatly manicured 14-mile stretch of road to accord Trump a grand welcome.

Trump generally dislikes foreign travel and prefers being home at the White House; in fact, he noted to reporters upon his departure from the White House that it was a long trip to India, and he was only going to be there one night. However, he has a particular affinity for India. He owned a hotel and casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, named the Trump Taj Mahal, and he owns multiple properties in India.

“There’s a lot of color. This is a loud and boisterous country, and that exactly in some ways really fits with the Trump style,” said Tanvi Madan, a senior fellow and director of The India Project at the Brookings Institution. She said Trump is likely to get a king’s welcome from a country well-rehearsed in the art of adulation. A half-million people gathered to hear President Dwight D. Eisenhower speak in 1959; former President Jimmy Carter had a village named after him — Carterpuri.

“In some ways, American presidents go to India to feel loved,” Madan said. She predicted Trump would receive an even grander welcome because the Indians recognize it’s something Trump expects and that could keep them in his good graces.

“It’s not about him, per se, for them. It is the U.S. relationship for India is crucial,” she said.

India has spent weeks making preparations for the visit. At a cost of almost $14 million, the government is blanketing the city with ads of Trump and Modi and hastily erected a 1,640-foot brick wall beside the road Trump will take to the stadium, which officials are rushing to finish in time for Trump’s arrival. Critics said the wall was built to block the view of a slum inhabited by more than 2,000 people. Stray dogs have been caught and exotic trees planted.

Trump’s foreign visits have typically been light on sightseeing, but this time, the president and first lady Melania Trump are to visit the Taj Mahal. Stories in local media warn of the monkeys that inhabit the landmark pestering tourists for food and, on occasion, menacing visitors and slingshot-carrying security guards.

Presidents have often used trips overseas to bolster their electoral prospects. Images of American presidents being feted on the world stage stand in contrast to those of their rivals in the opposing party slogging through diners in early-voting states and clashing in debate.

This trip, in particular, reflects a Trump campaign strategy to showcase him looking presidential during short, carefully managed trips that provide counterprogramming to the Democrats’ primary contest and produce the kinds of visuals his campaign can use in future ads. His aides also believe the visit could help the president woo tens of thousands of Indian-American voters before the November election.

Some of Trump’s past trips have been overshadowed by diplomatic snafus and political gaffes. When Barack Obama was running for president, his reception in Germany in front of a massive crowd was featured prominently in an attack ad casting him as a mere “celebrity.”

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