• Donald Trump said photos of the massive crowd at Kamala Harris' Michigan rally were AI generated.
  • He said on Truth Social that she "cheated" and there was "NOBODY waiting for her" at the airport.
  • Trump himself has used AI for his campaigning efforts, saying that he used it to rewrite a speech.

Former President Donald Trump has advanced a new line of attack against Vice President Kamala Harris.

He's now falsely accusing Harris of using artificial intelligence to generate an image of a large crowd in Michigan, further claiming that there was "nobody waiting" for her at the airport on Wednesday when she arrived for her rally.

"Has anyone noticed that Kamala CHEATED at the airport?" he wrote in a Sunday Truth Social post. "There was nobody at the plane, and she 'A.I.'d' it, and showed a massive 'crowd' of so-called followers, BUT THEY DIDN'T EXIST!"

He added that pictures of the event, particularly the one which showed the reflection of the airport's surroundings on Air Force Two's body, proved that Harris had "NOBODY waiting for her."

Unfortunately for him, the crowds were in fact, very real.

Air Force Two with Harris and Gov. Tim Walz aboard arriving for a campaign rally on Wednesday in Romulus, Michigan. Foto: Carlos Osorio

Photos and videos showed the massive gathering of supporters at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport in Romulus, Michigan.

Harris speaking with supporters during the campaign rally at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport. Foto: Julia Nikhinson

People were seen standing shoulder to shoulder, packing the area.

The crowds of supporters at Harris' rally in Michigan. Foto: Julia Nikhinson

A rally video posted on X first zoomed in on Harris and her vice presidential candidate Gov. Tim Walz as they descended the stairs of Air Force Two, before zooming out to show the crowd of supporters in the airport hangar.

The Harris-Walz campaign told CNBC that the photo of the crowd was "an actual photo of a 15,000-person crowd for Harris-Walz in Michigan."

Their rallies have attracted large crowds across the country. The Friday rally in Glendale, Arizona, also saw more than 15,000 attendees, according to The Guardian.

Harris walking on stage to a large crowd during a campaign rally at in Glendale, Arizona on Friday. Foto: Julia Nikhinson

Harris arriving to speak at a campaign rally in Las Vegas on Saturday. Foto: Julia Nikhinson

David Plouffe, Harris' senior campaign advisor, slammed Trump on X, writing: "These are not conspiratorial rantings from the deepest recesses of the internet. The author could have the nuclear codes and be responsible for decisions that will affect us all for decades."

Walz also mocked Trump in a Friday rally in Glendale, saying: "You know, it's not as if anybody cares about crowd sizes or anything."

Trump has been known to care a great deal about crowd sizes.

On Thursday, he said that he drew a bigger crowd on January 6 than Martin Luther King Jr. did in 1963.

To be sure, people have been turning up for Trump rallies. But a video posted by conservative network RSBN showed that Trump's rally in Bozeman, Montana on Friday looked a little empty.

Though Trump was not speaking at the time, the video did pan to show the audience, and also captured a shot of a large section of the venue where there were rows of empty seats.

The former president has also not been historically averse to using AI for his campaigning efforts.

In a podcast released on June 14 with controversial social-media influencer Logan Paul, he said that someone in his team rewrote his speech with the use of AI.

"He goes click, click, click, and 15 seconds later he showed me my speech, written so beautifully," he said to Paul. "I said, I'm going to use this sucker."

Representatives for Trump and Harris did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider sent outside regular business hours.

Read the original article on Business Insider