From Wisconsin, where COVID-19 metrics are trending up, Trump says country is 'rounding the turn'
At his second rally of the day, President Donald Trump spoke to supporters on a chilly day in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
As he has at every rally recently, the president attempted to downplay the threat of COVID-19 and said the U.S. is "rounding the turn" on the pandemic, despite the country facing a third wave of cases and hospitalizations surging around the country.
Coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths are particularly on the rise in Wisconsin. On Friday, the state reported more than 5,000 new cases, and almost every county is experiencing "very high disease activity," including Brown County, where Green Bay sits, state health department data shows.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers has called the surge an "urgent crisis" and has asked people to stay home.

While in Wisconsin, Trump made it very clear that if "we win this state ... it's over."
He also continued to blast this week's ABC News/Washington Post poll, which found him down 17 points to Biden among likely voters in Wisconsin.
"I said, wait a minute, I just left a crowd of 25,000 people or more," said Trump, referring to a rally earlier this week in West Salem. "They were going crazy. That wasn't a second-place crowd. You know, we know a second-place crowd. That was not a second-place crowd."
-ABC News' Terrence Smith, Elizabeth Thomas and Will Steakin







