Pence says campaign looking at other venues for Trump Tulsa rally
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[June 17, 2020]
By Doina Chiacu
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Officials are
considering other venues in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for President Donald
Trump's first campaign rally since the coronavirus shutdown, Vice
President Mike Pence said on Tuesday, as virus cases climb in Oklahoma
and other states.
A Trump campaign official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said
later the rally would be held at the BOK Center arena in downtown Tulsa
as planned, "but the campaign is also considering other areas adjacent
to the arena to allow the president to address even more people."
Questions about logistics for the rally and its public health
implications mounted as an Oklahoma judge denied a petition for a court
order to block the event until organizers adopt social-distancing
measures to curb coronavirus infections.
The lawsuit, filed by two Tulsa businesses and two immunocompromised
city residents, said the prospect of assembling tens of thousands of
shouting, chanting people inside an enclosed arena amounted to a
"super-spreader" coronavirus event in the making.
"As currently planned, the event will endanger not only the health of
guests in attendance ... but the entire Tulsa community and any
community to which the guests may afterward travel," the lawsuit said.
Pence acknowledged the health risks of bringing so many people together
- the campaign said it had received more than 1 million ticket requests
- during an interview with Fox News.
"It's all a work in progress. We've had such an overwhelming response
that we're also looking at another venue. We're also looking at outside
activities, and I know the campaign team will keep the public informed
as that goes forward," Pence said.
"But it's one of the reasons that we're going to do the temperature
screening and we're going to provide hand sanitizers and provide masks
for people that are attending."
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President Donald Trump listens to Vice President Mike Pence speak
during a roundtable discussion on "America's seniors" in the Cabinet
Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., June 15, 2020.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
Pence said officials were discussing options with Oklahoma's
governor.
The campaign rally will be Trump's first since early March, when the
coronavirus pandemic led to quarantines and the shuttering of the
U.S. economy. Trump is seeking re-election in November against
presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
"One of the reasons we chose Oklahoma is because Oklahoma has done
such a remarkable job in reopening their state," Pence said.
However, coronavirus infections are on the rise in the state,
particularly around Tulsa. The city's chief health officer has
expressed concern about holding such a large indoor and said he
wished the rally could be postponed.
An editorial in Tulsa's largest newspaper said the rally would risk
lives and bring no benefit to the city. It called Trump "a divisive
figure" who is likely to attract protests and said there was no
reason to think a rally would affect the November election in the
state, which is heavily Republican.
"This is the wrong time and Tulsa is the wrong place for a Trump
rally," the Tulsa World said.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington; Additional reporting by
Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Gerry
Doyle)
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