It was an early win for Donald Trump.
Supporters of the former president in upstate New York won a last-minute court victory allowing them to illuminate a 100-foot-wide “Vote for Trump” sign — despite their city’s effort to block the massive political endorsement.
Anthony Constantino — the CEO of manufacturing company Sticker Mule who has a political action committee supporting the Republican presidential nominee — will move forward with a rally Monday evening to officially unveil the sign that sits atop his firm’s building.
“We are all set to light it up!” Constantino told The Post by text of the ruling that came down less than two hours before the 7 p.m. event.
Anthony Constantino, the CEO of manufacturing company Sticker Mule, plans to hold a rally Monday to light his “Vote for Trump” sign. Sticker Mule
Lawyers for Amsterdam, a municipality of about 18,000 some 35 miles northwest of Albany, claimed in a lawsuit last week that the signage violated city code and could be a safety hazard by distracting passing drivers.
Montgomery County Supreme Court Justice Rebecca Slezak had issued a ruling that would have barred the giant message from being lit until at least a Tuesday