colorado rally
colorado rally

By Gregg Re | Fox News

President Trump was continuing his four-state trip out west Thursday evening with a rally in Colorado Springs, Colo., shortly after signaling he might pardon his former advisor Roger Stone and openly celebrating Democrats’ intra-party squabbling at the Las Vegas primary presidential primary debate.

The line to enter the Broadmoor World Arena started forming Wednesday morning, with people bringing along tents, space heaters and sleeping bags, Fox 21 reported. Overnight and early morning temperatures were in the teens — but Trump supporters, as they did in New Hampshire earlier this month, braved the cold regardless.

Ahead of his second of three rallies in three days, Trump was exuding reelection confidence Thursday following the Democrats’ Vegas prizefight — and, especially, the perceived weak debut debate performance from former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, aides and allies said.

At a rope line at the airport after deplaning Air Force One in Colorado, Trump asked supporters how they felt Bloomberg did. As the crowd laughed, Trump remarked, “That wasn’t pretty, right?”

HUNDREDS CAMP OUT OVERNIGHT AHEAD OF COLORADO TRUMP RALLY

When Trump woke up Thursday morning in his gilded Las Vegas hotel, he tuned in to the post-debate coverage and displayed a similar glee, as The Associated Press put it.

Supporters standing for the Pledge of Allegiance before an appearance by President Trump at his campaign rally Thursday in Colorado Springs, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Repurposing one of Bloomberg’s own quotes about the Democrats infighting, Trump tweeted: “The real winner last night was Donald Trump.” He tacked on his own coda: “I agree!”

Speaking in Las Vegas later Thursday, Trump confidently said Stone has a “very good chance of exoneration,” even though a judge had just sentenced him to over three years in jail for lying to Congress. Stone was not charged with any criminal conspiracy with Russia or WikiLeaks, however, and his defense team has sought a new trial after the jury foreperson was revealed to be a fierce anti-Trump critic.

The jury forewoman, Tomeka Hart, even posted specifically about the Stone case before she was selected to sit on the jury, as she retweeted an argument mocking people who considered Stone’s dramatic arrest in a predawn raid by a federal tactical team to be excessive force. She also praised the investigation conducted by former Special Counsel Robert Mueller, which ultimately led to Stone’s prosecution.

Trump supporters camping out in advance of the rally in Colorado Springs. (Fox 21 KXRM)

On Wednesday night, after an earlier campaign rally in Phoenix, Trump summoned reporters to his office aboard Air Force One to join him in watching a replay of the debate on the return flight to Las Vegas. His motorcade jammed up traffic for over half an hour as it passed the casino that had hosted the Democrats’ debate in the lead-up to the party caucuses in Nevada on Saturday.

WATCH: BLOOMBERG UNDER SIEGE AT DEM DEBATE

Even as he campaigned, Trump’s preoccupation with the Democrats’ scrambled nomination race has been clear throughout the trip.

TRUMP SAYS ROGER STONE HAS ‘VERY GOOD CHANCE OF EXONERATION’ — IS PARDON COMING?

Bloomberg has been the most disconcerting force in the 2020 race for Trump since the ultra-billionaire entered the fray in November and spent over $400 million, which rocketed him in the polls in just three months.

Trump’s campaign poll numbers have improved since his impeachment trial wrapped up in January and his campaign has broken fundraising records, raising $60 million in January and $14 million this week in California alone. But, Bloomberg’s willingness to spend near-unlimited sums to defeat Trump this fall, and the mocking tone of many of his ads, are said to have rankled the president deeply.

Tracy Kime of Colorado Springs, Colo., showing her shoes and socks while waiting for Trump to take the stage. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Trump’s campaign had organized itself around the strategy that it would be able to paint any rival as an extreme liberal, a “socialist” or worse, and concerns mounted that strategists would have to come up with a different plan should Bloomberg win the nomination.

DIRTY JURY POOL? WHY WAS HEAD ROGER STONE JUROR REALLY LAYING INTO TRUMP, PRAISING ROBERT MUELLER?

Trump’s team saw the debate as validating his reelection strategy and providing a fresh opening for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described Democratic socialist, to gain a significant delegate lead on Super Tuesday. The president was hopeful that panic from more moderate Democrats at Sanders’ rise would fracture their party only further.

“We don’t care who the hell it is,” Trump boasted Wednesday. “We’re going to win.”

Trump on Thursday placed a round of calls to confidants, echoing the thoughts he had posted on Twitter — at times with more colorful language — and opining that Bloomberg did not appear ready for the moment, two Republicans close to the White House told the AP.

Trump told confidants that the debate proved money alone did not lead to his own electoral success.

His eldest son echoed the thought as he tweeted during the debate.

“Like a deer in the headlights! Like I said last week Mini, you can’t buy personality or wit and the whole world just saw it,” Donald Trump Jr. wrote.

Jody Miller of Scottsdale, Ariz., waiting for an appearance by President Trump at the rally Thursday in Colorado Springs. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Between three rallies and a pair of high-dollar fundraisers, Trump sought to use his western swing to highlight administration policies that delivered on campaign promises and appealed to key demographics.

On Wednesday, he ceremoniously signed new environmental regulations that eased water restrictions on farmers in the heavily Republican California Central Valley. On Thursday, Trump spoke to a graduating class of ex-prisoners in a renewed appeal to communities of color, as he championed his administration’s work on criminal justice reform.

“Your future does not have to be defined by the mistakes of your past,” Trump told the graduates, before turning to political topics.

Trump received updates on the debate’s opening minutes Wednesday evening moments before he took the stage at a rally in a packed Phoenix arena and promptly delivered his first review.

“I hear he’s getting pounded tonight — you know he’s in a debate,” Trump said about the man he has dubbed “Mini Mike” because of his short stature. “I hear that pounding. He spent $500 million so far and I think he has 15 points. Crazy Bernie was at 30.”

Fox News’ Ronn Blitzer, Kelly Chernenkoff and The Associated Press contributed to this report. Gregg Re is a lawyer and editor based in Los Angeles.

NH POLITICIAN is owned and operated by USNN World News Corporation, a New Hampshire based media company specializing in the collection, publication and distribution of public opinion information, local,...