The U.S. leader is expected to hold a rally at 7 p.m. ET in Manchester in New Hampshire, which he lost by around 2,700 votes in 2016. According to a number of Trump campaign trackers, the rally will represent his first official campaign stop in a state he lost.

Whether his defeat in the state nearly three years ago will see a muting of the bravado he typically displays at campaign rallies in states where supporters abound remains to be seen.

Among residents of the Granite State, the U.S. leader can expect to receive a mixed welcome, with a crowd of Trump supporters—and detractors—already forming outside the Southern New Hampshire University, where the president’s rally will be held, a day before the event.

Video shared by WBZ Evening News shows a line of Trump supporters forming outside the venue on Wednesday, waiting for the president’s Thursday arrival, while protesters also gather outside holding up signs calling for “unity” rather than “hatred.”

“We have someone who’s spewing hate from the White House,” one New Hampshire resident, Bob Perry, told WBZ Evening News. “That needs to stop.”

Meanwhile, in interviews with The Associated Press, even some former Trump supporters agreed, expressing “Trumpgret” over their decision to support the U.S. leader in the 2016 election.

Speaking to AP, Trump voter Chad Johansen said he was experiencing some “Trumpgret” after voting for the billionaire whom he believed would help small business owners compete with the Goliaths of the business world. He told AP that he had voted for Barack Obama in 2012 before helping see Trump elected four years later.

However, the 26-year-old who owns the NH iPhone Repair company, said that in the years since casting his ballot for Trump, he has been left disappointed. Johansen said Trump has paid little attention to the health care concerns of small-scale employers, while the president’s tariffs have also caused worry among business owners.

Even outside of the impact of the president’s policies on small businesses, Johansen said Trump has failed to impress him, with the U.S. leader’s bigoted and racist rhetoric being a “turnoff.”

“The president’s supposed to be the face of the United States of America…and supposed to make everyone be proud to be an American and stand up for everyone who is an American,” said Johansen. “I don’t feel that President Trump’s doing that. I feel like it’s chaos.”

Gino Brogna, a 57-year-old chef manager, said that he felt compelled to vote for Trump in 2016 as a Republican “by nature.” However, this time around, he said he would not vote for Trump because he does not believe the president is “true to his word on a lot of things.” Republican or not, a vote for Trump is “not going to happen,” he said.

An August University of New Hampshire Survey Center poll found that 42 percent of adult residents in the state approved of Trump, compared to 53 percent who said they disapproved of the U.S. leader. When it came to the economy, 49 percent, the majority, said they approved of the president’s approach, compared with 44 percent who disagreed.

Robert Burrows, a 34-year-old tire technician living in the state, told AP that while “Trump isn’t somebody I’d want to marry to my sister or my mother…that’s not what I want him in office for.”

For Burrows, receiving a raise and a competing job offer has been enough to convince him that Trump is doing a decent job at handling the economy.

Dartmouth College political scientist Dean Lacy told AP that Trump “doesn’t have an economic strategy that’s designed to win New Hampshire. But [it is] also one that’s not going to necessarily lose New Hampshire.”