Attendance at President Trump’s New Hampshire rally earlier this week included 17% of participants who did not vote in 2016, and slightly over 25% were Democratic voters, according to campaign manager Brad Parscale.

“Big Data from New Hampshire: 52,559 Tickets, 24,732 Voters Identified (41% From NH), 17% Didn’t Vote in 2016, 25.4% Democrats. Thank You New Hampshire. Data Gold!” Parscale said on Twitter Monday.

Big Data from New Hampshire:



✅ 52,559 Tickets



✅ 24,732 Voters Identified (41% From NH)



✅ 17% Didn’t Vote in 2016



✅ 25.4% Democrats



Thank You New Hampshire. Data Gold!



💥 — Brad Parscale - Text TRUMP to 88022 (@parscale) February 11, 2020

Rally attendees began lining up for Monday night’s event 35 hours before the start.

"I can’t wait for this one,” one Trump supporter who showed up early said. “He’s going to be all pumped up because the impeachment is all over with.”

New Hampshire Republican Gov. Chris Sununu commented on Trump’s popularity in the state by predicting the president will win there in 2020 after losing by a narrow margin to Hillary Clinton in 2016.

“When [voters] go into that ballot box, that’s why they are going to be pulling the lever, and Donald Trump is going to win New Hampshire — because we kind of match our pro-business message with his economic success,” Sununu said on Monday.

The New Hampshire attendance numbers represent the continuation of a trend at Trump rallies that was evident at Trump’s previous rally in Wildwood, New Jersey, in late January.

At that event, 25% of those in attendance were Democrats, and 10% did not vote in 2016.

Almost 50% of ticket holders at a recent Trump rally in Ohio identified as Democrats or independents, and almost 60% said the same thing at a rally in Wisconsin.

“Great being in New Hampshire last night,” President Trump said following the rally. “I would say that was the biggest political Rally in New Hampshire history. Incredible evening!”