Trump delights supporters, alarms health officials with Tulsa rally
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[June 20, 2020]
By Jeff Mason and Makini Brice
WASHINGTON/TULSA, Okla. (Reuters) - Amid a
still-strong pandemic and after weeks of protests about racial
inequality, President Donald Trump will hold a rally with thousands of
supporters in Oklahoma on Saturday in an effort to reinvigorate his
re-election campaign.
Trump has come under fire for his responses to the coronavirus and to
the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died in the custody of
Minneapolis police.
He drew more criticism for his decision to hold his first rally since
schools and businesses were shut in March to stop the spread of
coronavirus in Tulsa, the site https://www.reuters.com/article/us-minneapolis-police-tulsa/for-black-tulsans-trumps-visit-evokes-painful-legacy-of-1921-massacre-idUSKBN23Q2Q1
of the country's bloodiest outbreaks of racist violence against black
Americans some 100 years ago.
Oklahoma has reported a surge in new COVID-19 infections in recent days,
and the state's department of health has warned that attendees at the
19,000-seat BOK Center venue face an increased risk of catching the
virus.
The Republican president is trailing presumptive Democratic presidential
nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, in polls ahead of the November
election.
Supporters are delighted to see Trump back on the campaign trail, and
those wanting to attend far outstripped the number of seats available,
Trump campaign officials said.
Mike Boatman, 52, said he arrived in Tulsa from southern Indiana on
Monday to ensure he secured his spot.
"Over one million tickets being requested for this, so I wanted to be
here early," Boatman said. "This ain't nothing. I mean, what our
president does for us every day, he sacrifices for us, every one of us,
no matter who we are, whether we are Black, white, Asian, yellow. He
don't care."
The country's racial divide remains a political vulnerability. Trump's
"law and order" reaction to the protests triggered by Floyd's death has
put him at odds with the views of most Americans.
After intense criticism, Trump postponed the rally by a day so that it
did not coincide with the anniversary of the June 19 commemoration of
the end of Black slavery in the United States.
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A sculpture of U.S. President Donald Trump sits on a roadblock near
the BOK Center, ahead of his upcoming rally, in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
U.S., June 19, 2020. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic
On Friday, he threatened unspecified action against any "protesters,
anarchists, agitators, looters or lowlifes" who traveled to
Oklahoma, a warning that his campaign said was not aimed at peaceful
demonstrators. Critics accused Trump of trying to provoke conflict.
White House and Trump campaign officials have largely dismissed
concerns about the rally's safety, saying masks and hand sanitizer
will be available. However, participants are required to waive their
right sue if they contract the coronavirus at the event.
Outside the venue, Michigan resident Saundra Kiczenski, 40, said
this would be her 36th Trump rally and her 19th state. She wondered
how public health concerns would change things.
"Are they going to have, like chairs on the floor, like spread out
like that? Are they going to have everybody together like we were?"
Kiczenski asked. "It's kind of a different thing for everybody -
come to this one and then see how things are going to change going
to November."
Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale told Fox News on Friday that he
would probably wear a mask to the rally, while White House
spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany told reporters she would not. Trump has
eschewed wearing a mask in public.
Strategists and former administrations officials say Trump must
convince voters that his policies will pull the United States out of
the recession sparked by the economic shutdown amid the outbreak.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Makini Brice; Additional reporting by
Julio-Cesar Chavez and Susan Heavey; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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