President Donald Trump is scheduled to visit Rockland County on Friday, May 22, and speak in Suffern at Rockland Community College, where his appearance with Rep. Mike Lawler is expected to draw heavy traffic, rolling road closures and protests. The White House said Trump will speak Friday afternoon at the Eugene Levy Fieldhouse in an event focused on affordability and federal tax cuts.
The visit lands on a day already crowded with political activity. Tickets were handed out on a first-come, first-served basis, and state Sen. Bill Weber said Trump’s trip marks the first visit by a sitting U.S. president to Rockland in half a century. By noon, a separate rally in Nanuet organized by Rockland Forward and other groups had drawn a crowd approaching 200 people, part of a broader wave of civil rights and Democratic protests aimed at the president’s appearance.
For supporters, the trip is being framed as a chance to talk about pocketbook issues that have dogged suburban New York for months. Lawler has made increasing the SALT deduction a central issue for suburban taxpayers, and the White House said the event would spotlight affordability and tax cuts from last year’s tax and spending package. The message is meant to land in a region where the cost of living has become a political pressure point and where federal tax policy has a direct effect on many middle- and upper-income households.
But the visit also arrived with a sharp counterargument from Democrats. On Thursday, U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand criticized Trump ahead of the trip, saying, “New Yorkers don’t need a rally; they need relief.” She said it “doesn’t matter what Trump says tomorrow” and added that “New Yorkers are suffering because of what he’s done to them and their families: higher costs, a gutted health care system, and a president more focused on his own bottom line than on the people he was elected to serve.”
That criticism echoed through the protest scene on Friday. Cait Conley told the crowd, “Donald Trump is coming to the Hudson Valley for one reason: Mike Lawler is scared,” casting the visit as a political rescue mission rather than a governing event. At the Nanuet rally, Paulette Stroud held a sign reading, “Mr. President, Please lead with integrity.” She said “the way he does things is not keeping with the best of American values.”
The split-screen on Friday was stark: a presidential event inside Rockland Community College, a protest crowd outside and road disruptions spreading through the county as the motorcade and security operation moved in. Trump’s visit may be billed as a discussion of affordability, but in Rockland County it is also a test of whether that message can compete with anger over his record, his politics and the cost of his return to suffern ny. The most immediate answer is already clear: he is not arriving to a quiet crowd, and the argument over what his visit means has begun before he takes the stage.






