Anyone else see that?

I thought I was hallucinating, someone else responded on social media.

About 10 others also reported seeing a float emblazoned with signs saying Trump 2020: Build The Wall and music playing as it rolled through metro Phoenix on Monday night. There were sightings on the Arizona State University campus, then Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport.

Snapchat lit up with video of the float's journey.

By Tuesday, a Tucson man made a similar post.

"I swear this was not a mirage: In downtown Tucson, a truck just drove past our office pulling a big float decorated in red, white and blue that said 'Trump 2020, Build The Wall,'" Arizona Daily Star columnist Tim Steller wrote on Twitter.

He said he ran outside, but the float had passed, although strains of "Macarena" could still be heard blaring from the stereo.

So what was that about?

Apparently, a Michigan man has been touring the country with the trailer hitched to a truck since 2016. Rob Cortis, the man behind the float, says on his website that he's been to the 48 contiguous U.S. states to support the president and stress the importance of securing the Southern border.

An official Facebook page for Donald Trump posted a video of Cortis' float in 2017.

The float stirred attention in Ohio last month when it drove by a vigil to honor the 49 killed in Christchurch, New Zealand. Mourners outside Cleveland City Hall looked on in disbelief as the float rolled past with "God Bless America" playing from its speaker, Cleveland 19 reported. Cortis told the local TV station he was leaving the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and happened to drive by city hall as the memorial was being held.

Cortis could not immediately be reached for comment on his Arizona journey, but he posted on Facebook that he was touring several Valley cities including Mesa, Phoenix, Tempe and Scottsdale.

Immigration, and the effectiveness of building a border wall, has been a divisive issue in Arizona and across the nation. The government was shut down in January as Trump and Congress couldn't reach agreement on the issue, and the president recently threatened to close the border and shutoff trade with Mexico.

According to his website, Cortis created the float, called the Trump Unity Bridge, the night of the final 2016 presidential debate in an attempt to bring people together on common issues from border security to healthcare.

Have a tip out of Scottsdale? Reach the reporter Lorraine Longhi at llonghi@gannett.com or 480-243-4086. Follow her on Twitter @lolonghi.

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