Melania Trump defends husband in rare speech

Melania Trump cast her husband as someone who’s in touch with America’s working class as she made a rare appearance on the campaign trail.

“Every time my husband learned of a factory closing in Ohio or North Carolina or Pennsylvania, I could see him get very upset,” she said as she made the case that the Republican nominee can fix the nation’s economic woes.

Trump opened the speech by discussing her youth in Slovenia before immigrating to the United States, saying that “America meant if you could dream it, you could become it.”

She said she went through a 10-year process of becoming a United States citizen, which she called “the greatest privilege in the world.”

“I’m an immigrant, and no one values the freedoms and opportunities of America more than me,” she said.

Melania Trump hasn’t had a very public role on the campaign trail and has made it clear, publicly and privately, that her first priority is raising their 10-year-old son, Barron.

But her speech Thursday was the first of what Donald Trump said in an interview with ABC would be two or three major speeches before the November 8 election.

The speech took place in Berwyn, Pennsylvania — in the suburbs of Philadelphia — and was designed to help Trump win over the middle-class women in the region who could tip the balance of Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral votes for Trump or Clinton.

Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway worked with Melania Trump on the speech and was in attendance Thursday. Conway, Trump advisers said, has built a positive relationship with Melania over the course of the campaign. And Melania has privately been very supportive of Conway’s role as the head of her husband’s campaign.

Melania Trump was introduced by Karen Pence, the wife of the Republican nominee’s running mate Mike Pence.

“I know that America will fall in love with her just as much as she loves the American people,” Karen Pence said.

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