President Obama’s advice to democratic delegates booing the mere mention of Donald Trump this summer at the Democratic National Convention—“Don’t boo, vote”—seems to not have fully resonated with voters. On Tuesday morning Trump was met with a friendly New York City greeting when he arrived at P.S. 59 in Midtown Manhattan on Tuesday morning to cast his vote with wife Melania and daughter Ivanka in tow: a chorus of loud boos from bystanders.

“New York hates you!” one person yelled at the Republican candidate, who cast his vote hours after Hillary Clinton. “It’s really good. Right now, it’s looking really good,” Trump told reporters after voting.

It’s the second time the Republican presidential candidate has cast a vote for himself—he first voted in the primaries this spring in New York. “It’s a great honor,” he quipped after casting his vote. “It was a great moment. It was really something, very special. We want to make America great again.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s son Eric posted a ballot selfie, probably breaking the law in New York, where photographing your ballot and then posting the picture is illegal.

For the elder Trump, who has not yet made clear how, or if, he plans to concede in the event of a Clinton win on Tuesday evening, the idea of defeat is barely palatable. “If we don’t win, I will consider this the single greatest waste of time, energy . . . and money,” Trump said on Monday night in North Carolina, during the end of a breakneck five-state tour, adding, “If we don’t win, honestly, we’ve all wasted our time.”