A trek to President Donald Trump’s rally in Melbourne on Saturday turned a middle-aged car salesman from Boynton Beach into a worldwide political talking head, taking it upon himself to spread America’s leader’s message to the world.

"I feel that I have to represent him in our movement … I want to bring the positivity about our president to everybody that I can," Gene Huber, 47, told The Palm Beach Post on Monday from his Boynton Beach living room. "If I can change one person’s mind that wasn’t for Trump, that would put a smile on my face."

Two days after Trump surprisingly pulled Huber up to the stage in Melbourne, the married father of two answered phone calls and juggled a line of reporters waiting to interview the newest "Joe the Plumber" or Kenneth Bone.

Read the full transcript of Trump’s rally speech in Florida

Huber’s enthusiasm and passion for the president is evident, both in his frenzied cadence and the Trump paraphernalia that decorates his home: Eight coffee cups. Fourteen coins. Key chains. A "gorgeous looking" $1 million gold-plated bill.

And then there’s the Donald Trump talking-head pen.

"I’m really rich," the pen’s recording plays. Huber responds. "Yes, you are. True."

"I don’t wear a toupee. It’s my hair, I swear," the recording plays.

Huber gently pets the pen’s hair.

"Our leaders are stupid. Our politicians are stupid," the Trump pen goes on.

Huber responds: "Yes they are sir. Not no more."

And of course, front and center: there is a life-size cutout of the President Trump that has received almost as much time in the spotlight these past couple of days as Huber himself.

Huber, during the interview, becomes concerned with white scratches on the lower body of the Trump cutout.

"You’ll be alright, sir," Huber states. "I love this man and to have him in my house where I can give him a salute every single morning, which I do, that means a lot to me."

Huber’s proud. And he’s only just begun his work for Trump — he hopes.

"I know he’s watching me," Huber said. "I really would love to go where Donald Trump’s staff calls me for something. People have been telling me ‘be ready.’ If they called me right now I would say ‘it’s nice meeting ya.’ Vroom I’m out of here."

He said he hasn’t been contacted by Trump or his staff yet.

Daughter: ‘I’m not as crazy about Trump as my dad is’

Huber is a father to 17-year-old daughter, Alyssa, and 5-year-old son, Gene. He has been married to his wife, Catherine, for about 18 years.

Growing up in Long Island, N.Y., Huber attended Connetquot High School, near Long Island MacArthur Airport, for three years. Then his family moved to Florida where Huber finished high school at Springstead High School, north of Tampa.

About 1994, the family moved to the Boynton Beach area. Huber’s held jobs at Publix, banks, and at the U.S. Post Office. Huber says he is an excellent bowler, sporting six perfect 300 games.

Alyssa Huber, who attends Park Vista Community High School in nearby Lake Worth, first heard about her dad’s unique role at Saturday’s rally through a friend, who sent her a photo on her phone. At the rally, after her dad spoke onstage, next to Trump, the president said "a star is born," as the crowd chanted "USA! USA!"

"I was speechless," Alyssa Huber said.

While her father navigated through interviews Monday, Alyssa sat in a nearby room and watched TV. She said she supports Trump, but, "I’m not as crazy as my dad is about him. I’m not really big with politics."

The Hubers live in east Boynton in a gated community just west of Congress Avenue — a street populated with business offices, apartments and restaurants.

Carlos Jesus, 25, lives across the street from the Hubers. He has known Huber since he was about 10 years old, and the two share a bond over their support of Trump.

"If we were outside we would say ‘Hey, what’s going on with Trump?’" Jesus said of their past conversations about the president.

Jesus, who still has a Trump/Pence sign sitting outside his front door, said the president presents a "light" for the middle class. "We fight for what’s ours," he said.

Hoping for an invitation to Mar-a-Lago

In Boynton, Huber doesn’t follow local politics; doesn’t pay much attention to the city’s mayor. And he doesn’t go out much. He works selling cars from home.

Since November, Huber’s partnered in a car business with an old friend. The two run GT Motors. Huber takes the calls from his home, and the cars are in Bethpage, N.Y.

PHOTOS: Take a tour through Trump’s Mar-a-Lago

While Huber lives about 30 minutes away from Trump’s "winter White House," Mar-a-Lago on Palm Beach, he has never been there. But he hopes for an invitation.

"Come on over for some shrimp cocktail huh? It’s wonderful to know that he’s not far away," he said.

Thanks to his friend in New York, Huber has been to Trump’s golf course in Doral. The two spent the weekend there about a month ago.

But as for Trump’s other places, Huber just pretends. He posts on Facebook that he’s actually at one of the president’s properties.

"So it looks like Gene’s at Trump winery. I just do it because it’s a little joke I say," he said.

Huber says his social media accounts have been populated with the public’s reactions to his encounter with Trump.

"The messages I’m getting from people around the country, it’s so inspiring. It brings tears to my eyes when I read stuff like that because I’m not realizing how much it’s touching people," he said.

Past mistakes ‘don’t bother me’

While he welcomes the attention, he doesn’t understand why some media outlets are scrutinizing his past. Boynton Beach Police arrested Huber on a DUI charge about 15 years ago. Court records show he pleaded guilty in 2002.

"I made a mistake at the age of 31 and I learned from it. That’s it," he said.

And more recently, in 2015, Huber, out of work, couldn’t pay his $11,000 Bank of America credit card bill. The company sued him, but the case was dismissed.

"Whoop-ti-do," he said. "We paid it off. They find anything they can for negativity. That stuff don’t bother me."

Before Trump, Huber said he never felt passionate about a politician, or even a sports player.

"I didn’t care about trade, I didn’t care about pharmaceuticals how we’re getting ripped off, I didn’t care. I didn’t understand about health care. I didn’t understand about anything. He taught me everything and about how ripped off we are and been getting," he said.

Huber said he doesn’t trust the media, believes the president will provide a health care plan that will help Americans save money, and supports Trump’s plans to build a wall at the U.S./Mexico border.

He believes Trump will be the best president in American history.

"Everything he says I believe. If he says the moon’s going to turn purple, I’d believe it. That’s how much I believe in our president," Huber said.