Trump warns "Nothing will stop me" at rally to celebrate 100 days of office | Donald Trump

Donald Trump celebrated his 100th day at a campaign-style rally in Michigan and attacked “the radical left-wing judge of the Communist Party” in an attempt to seize his power, warning: “Nothing will stop me.”

The president also sent videotapes of El Salvador’s infamous prison from the United States for Venezuelan immigrants, enjoying El Salvador’s infamous prison, accompanied by Hollywood-style music and crowd recognition.

Trump's choice of Michigan is not only how the battlefield state can help him win Vice President Kamala Harris in the election last November, but also his position as a potential beneficiary of tariff policies, which he claims will revive the U.S. manufacturing industry.

But the Sponge-like Sports and Expo Center in Warren City near Detroit was only halfway at the rally and left a steady man before his disengagement and winding 89-minute address ended.

"We are in the heart of our country tonight to celebrate the 100 most successful days of any government in our country's history!" Trump announced. “In 100 days, we have achieved the most profound changes in Washington in nearly 100 years.”

The 45th and 47th Presidents falsely accused the last engineering government of a massive border invasion and allowed gangs, cartels and terrorists to infiltrate the community. “Democrats vowed mass invasions and mass immigration,” he said. “We are doing mass deportations.”

Trump defended his use of the Alien Enemy Act, the 1798 Wartime Administration, allowing the president to detain or expel citizens of enemy countries to expel foreign terrorists from the United States as soon as possible. He then aimed at the court that had stopped many moves in the first 100 days.

Trump said in obvious frustration: "We cannot allow a few left-wing judges of the Communist Party to obstruct our law enforcement and assume the duties that belong only to the President of the United States." The judges are trying to deprive the powers that give the President of our country to ensure the security of our country.

"It's not a good thing, but I hope the Supreme Court is going to save that because we have to do something. These people are just trying to destroy our country. Nothing can stop me from entering the mission to make sure America is safe again."

In a dark dramatic style, Trump encourages crowds to watch large screens that mainly show gang members who arrived in the U.S. in El Salvador last month and were shaved or manipulated by guards.

The video was originally shared by Salvador’s authoritarian president Nayib Bukele and accompanied by Moody’s music, reminiscent of a thriller. Once on the big screen, a simple message is provided, namely, “100 Days of Greatness”, and the crowd cheers and breaks into the ode to “America! America! America!”.

The arena was surrounded by banners with “American Investing,” “Jobs! Trump supporters held slogans like “Make America Great Again” and “American Golden Age.” Unemployment in Michigan has increased for three consecutive months.

One behind the president waving "Trump 2028," despite Hanna's constitutionally banned from the third term. Margo Martin, the White House aide, joined the stage at some point and asked, "Trump 2028, is there anyone?" The crowd roared.

Before the rally, the warm-up tracks included James Brown and Luciano Pavarotti's World of Men, Sinéad O'Connor and YMCA's YMCA (YMCA) and YMCA's 2u. The movie Tommy has a video clip of Elton John and a pinball guide who is singing while the factory workers turn to country singer Oliver Anthony to perform the wealthy man north of Richmond.

Trump is next to the “100 Days Great” sign. Photo: Evelyn Hawkstan/Reuters

However, despite the ostensibly celebrating his election victory and the first 100 days are huge, Trump spent most of the rally on campaign mode and fixed on past resentment and dissatisfaction.

He laughed at Biden's mental acumen, even laughed at the way he appeared in his swimsuit, repeating the lies he won the 2020 election and trying to discredit polls and news coverage for him. “When you watch fake news, you see fake polls,” he said. “In legal polls, I think we were in the 60s, 70s.”

Trump defended the administration's huge tariffs on cars and auto parts hours after the White House announced softening them. He boasted about the diversity, equity and inclusion of the entire federal government and the private sector, and made its formal government policy think there were only two genders.

He reiterated his support for troubled Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, telling the crowd: "I have a lot of confidence in him. Fake news is in his pursuit, but he is a tough cookie. They don't know how hard he is."

Trump also praised his billionaire ally, Ally Elon Musk and his “government efficiency ministry” or threshold, and condemned the backlash against Tesla and space entrepreneurs: “It’s unfair to everything they do to him. It’s a shame.”

The rally features a guest speech by Brian Pannebecker, a retired auto worker who wrote a book about his support for Trump, and the White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller said seriously: "Thank you President Trump for being the greatest president in American history."

Democrats have different opinions. "Tonight's sad display of Trump will not help, and can help the family he started messing up 100 days ago," said Democratic National Committee Chairman Ken Martin.

"Michigan and the rest of the country are seeing through Trump, so he has the lowest approval rate for generations. If he hasn't been scared of what the ballot box brings between now and the midterm elections, then he should be."