Trump campaign to give Tulsa rally-goers masks, fever checks
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[June 16, 2020]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People
attending President Donald Trump's campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on
Saturday will receive temperature checks, masks and hand sanitizer
before entering the arena, the Republican's campaign said.
The campaign said there have been more than 1 million ticket requests
for the indoor rally, Trump's first in the three months since the new
coronavirus curbed travel and shut down the economy.
People lining up to get into the venue will face temperatures forecast
to be up to 95 degrees Fahrenheit (35 degrees Celsius). Precautions will
be taken against the heat and there will be bottled water, campaign
spokesman Brad Parscale said on Monday on Twitter.
The rally was postponed from Friday after a public outcry because it
coincided with Juneteenth and would be held in a city where one of the
largest black massacres took place a century ago. African Americans mark
June 19 as the day in 1865 that slaves in Texas found out they had been
freed by the Emancipation Proclamation made more than two years
previously,
Tulsa's chief health official told a local newspaper on Saturday he was
concerned about a large event of any kind taking place indoors when
coronavirus infections in the area were rising.
Other health experts have expressed concern the event could be a "superspreader"
for the virus, which is seeing a flareup in several states after their
economies began to reopen.
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President Donald Trump arrives for a roundtable discussion with
members of the faith community, law enforcement and small business
at Gateway Church Dallas Campus in Dallas, Texas, U.S., June 11,
2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"The campaign takes the health and safety of rally-goers seriously
and is taking precautions to make the rally safe," Erin Perrine,
deputy communications director for the campaign, said in an email.
Ronna McDaniel, chairwoman of the Republican National Committee,
said people can make their own choices. "People with underlying
condition -- they're not going to go to a rally like this," she said
on Fox News.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Jason Lange; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman and Grant McCool)
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