GRAND RAPIDS, MI -- It's a bird! It's a plane! It's ... baby Donald Trump?

On Saturday, Oct. 27, activists will launch a 20-foot-tall, 13-foot-wide inflated caricature of President Trump as a diaper-clad infant into the downtown Grand Rapids skyline.

The "Baby Trump" balloon's day-long stop at Rosa Park Circle is the first and only Michigan appearance so far scheduled on the Baby Trump Tour, a nationwide opposition campaign against Trump's agenda.

"It's meant to be fun, but we're also making the point that this guy is dangerous and he's a little unhinged," said Cameron Young, co-organizer of the Grand Rapids event. "We want to make the point that this administration is taking us down what we think is the wrong path and is threatening to democracy, to our moral standing in the world."

The event, scheduled for 10 a.m.-4 p.m., will have a "festive atmosphere" with music, speakers and information about issues on the Nov. 6 ballot, according to the event description.

It's already received significant attention on Facebook, with about 500 people pledging to attend and another 4,000 interested.

Young said he hopes people walk away with an urge to vote in the midterms, regardless of what party they support.

"Our big point is that the upcoming elections are very important and we want people to get out and vote," he said. "No matter how they vote, we want them to get out and vote."

Organizers plan to fly the balloon about 40 feet above the park and stake it down. They said they got the necessary permit for the event and balloon flight from the city.

The balloon made its first appearance over the summer in London to protest Trump's U.K. visit.

Shortly after, a group of New Jersey activists called the People's Motorcade sought to bring the baby home to the United States. That group's GoFundMe campaign to create and purchase one was wildly successful, and the organizers ended up with six in all, according to MLive affiliate NJ.com.

Groups can "adopt" one of the six balloons for events in the United States. All balloons are complete with a phone to symbolize the president's penchant for Twitter.

Young said he reached out to People's Motorcade organizer Jim Girvan over Twitter about bringing one of the balloons to Grand Rapids.

To his surprise, Girvan responded. Young then rallied a group of people to support the event.

Following the faux Trump appearance over the weekend, the real Vice President Mike Pence will visit nearby Walker on Monday to rally for Michigan Republicans.