Angry Trump revisits escalator where it all began – but this time as a felon

<span>Donald Trump leaves a press conference at Trump Tower in New York on 31 May 2024.</span><span>Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images</span>
Donald Trump leaves a press conference at Trump Tower in New York on 31 May 2024.Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Approximately six minutes after 11am on Friday, Donald Trump entered the atrium of Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York City, wearing a scarlet tie. Behind the former US president, now a felon, stood the same escalator he used in 2015 to announce his presidential bid, triggering eight years of political chaos.

In a long-winded address in front of five American flags, golden walls and no teleprompters, Trump spoke for more than half an hour, kicking off his first public event following his guilty verdict in his hush-money criminal trial.

It was a rambling, incoherent speech laden with falsehoods and conspiracy theories – trademark Trump, in fact. But it also carried a foreboding threat, aimed at riling his already furious base and reinforcing his own deep sense of victimhood.

“This is a case where if they can do this to me, they can do this to anyone,” he said before launching into a tirade against immigration. “They’re coming in from all over the world into our country, and we have a president and a group of fascists that don’t want to do anything about it.”

Related: Trump hits out at ‘felon’ status in rambling speech at Trump Tower

Trump, making frequent hand gestures as he addressed a crowd of smiling Trump Tower employees, aides, reporters and his son Eric, went on to attack Joe Biden, baselessly saying that his fraud conviction had been “all done by Biden and his people”.

“I don’t know if Biden knows too much about it, because I don’t know if he knows about anything, but he’s nevertheless the president, so we have to use his name, and this is done by Washington, and nobody’s ever seen anything like it,” he said.

As Trump spoke, crowds of supporters gathered outside Trump Tower, which was heavily cordoned off by metal barricades and dozens of police officers. Loud cheers and honks could be heard from inside the building.

“The level of support has been incredible,” Trump said before falsely claiming once again that his trial had been “rigged”, adding that he is under a “nasty gag order which nobody has ever been under”.

In fact, in efforts to protect trial participants from Trump’s public attacks, judge Juan Merchan, who is overseeing the case, prohibited Trump from making public statements about witnesses, prosecutors and staff members of the court and district attorney’s office.

The former president, who has been convicted of 34 counts of falsifying business records, maintained his innocence. “I paid a lawyer, totally legal. I paid a lawyer a legal expense,” he said, referring to his former fixer and lawyer Michael Cohen, who helped facilitate the expenses to adult film star Stormy Daniels with whom Trump allegedly had a sexual affair.

Calling himself “literally crucified”, Trump vowed to appeal the “scam” conviction, saying: “We’re going to be appealing it on many different things.”

At one point, Trump made an elaborate claim, saying that his guilty verdict – a class E felony in New York, which is the least serious category and punishable by up to four years of jail time – is supposed to make him “go to jail for 187 years”.

Trump went on to frame himself as a self-sacrificing martyr on a mission to save American democracy – an image in stark contrast with the many observers both home and abroad who see Trump as the real danger to US civic society.

“It’s my honor to be doing this, it really is. It’s a very unpleasant thing, to be honest, but it’s a great, great honor. We are going to do what I have to do,” Trump said, adding vehemently: “I’m willing to do whatever I have to do to save our country and to save our constitution … We will continue the fight. We’re going to make America great again.”

Naturally, Trump’s speech was also a campaign rally for a race in which he is still neck and neck with Biden – though what impact his new felon status will have on the race remains to be seen. “Remember, November 5 is the most important day in the history of our country,” Trump said at the end of his remarks.

As he walked away from the podium, the onlooking crowd of Trump Tower employees broke into applause as reporters clamored for questions, which he left unanswered.

Related: The Guardian view on Donald Trump’s conviction: a criminal unfit to stand or serve | Editorial

Outside, crowds of supporters continued to gather across the street, many wearing red Maga hats and craning their necks in hopes of getting a view of the former president inside his 58-story skyscraper.

One supporter waved a large flag, billowing in the wind with a print of Trump’s mugshot from his Georgia election-interference case and the words “Trump or death”. Another held a sign that read “Trump 2024. Save America again!”

Across the street stood counter-protesters holding signs that read: “Tick tock, time’s up!” Others held signs saying “guilty” and “loser” in big, bold letters. In unison, the counter-protesters chanted: “No one is above the law! Trump is not above the law!”

Behind them, someone waved a sign that read: “Caution: felon at large.”