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Trump spends hours at UFC fight at Madison Square Garden

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From left, CEO of Ultimate Fighting Championship Dana White, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, singer Kid Rock and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk pose for a photo as they attend UFC 309 at Madison Square Garden in New York, Nov. 16, 2024.
From left, CEO of Ultimate Fighting Championship Dana White, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, singer Kid Rock and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk pose for a photo as they attend UFC 309 at Madison Square Garden in New York, Nov. 16, 2024.

President-elect Donald Trump celebrated his election victory on Saturday night by attending an Ultimate Fighting Championship event with billionaire friend Elon Musk and cheering fans at a heavily guarded Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Known by some in the mixed martial arts world as the "Combatant in Chief," Trump counts UFC President Dana White as a close friend and considers fans of the sport part of his political base.

Trump sat between White and Musk for much of the night and paid rapt attention to the fights, sometimes chatting with the fighters after their matches.

He entered the arena to loud music and waved to the crowd, many of whom returned the gesture. He spent hours at the event, watching five matches until past 1:30 a.m. on Sunday.

The headline event in the octagon at UFC 309 was a battle for the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world between Jon Jones and Stipe Miocic. After Jones won, he thanked Trump in his victory speech and they shook hands.

Among those joining the president-elect were House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, Tesla CEO Musk, a close Trump adviser, singer Kid Rock and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom he plans to nominate for secretary of health and human services.

Trump intelligence chief pick Tulsi Gabbard and country singer Jelly Roll were also in his entourage.

Trump’s visit to the storied Manhattan arena brought him back to the scene of a controversial campaign rally he held there on October 27, when a warm-up comedian mocked Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage."

A handful of visitors in Madison Square Garden, an arena with a seating capacity of nearly 20,000, wore red "Make America Great Again" hats.

One of them, Sean Allen, 22, traveled to the event from Monroe in upstate New York, where he lives and works for a county department.

He said he had voted for Trump and borrowed his MAGA hat from a friend after learning that the Republican president-elect, who won a decisive victory on November 5 over Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, might come to the fight.

"I’d never voted before. That was my first time voting," Allen said, adding that he could have voted at the previous election but did not care about politics.

"When I woke up, I was like, OK, wow, Trump won big."

Nicholas Defilippo, 39, another visitor in a MAGA hat, also put it on to express his support for Trump after voting for him. Defilippo lives in New Jersey and works in law enforcement.

"He’s the most courageous man on the planet," he said of Trump.

The president-elect's self-styled "Trump Force One" plane left Palm Beach airport shortly after nightfall for the two-hour flight. It was only the second time Trump has left the Palm Beach, Florida, area since winning the presidential election on November 5.

The 78-year-old Republican flew to Washington on Wednesday to meet with President Joe Biden at the White House, and has otherwise been filling Cabinet positions for his incoming administration from his oceanfront Mar-a-Lago resort.

A heavy security presence was in place around Madison Square Garden.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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