Trump’s campaign said the president would still travel to
Nevada, a swing state that will help decide whether the
Republican incumbent or Democratic rival Joe Biden wins the Nov.
3 presidential election.
The rallies had been scheduled at airports in Las Vegas and
Reno. Tim Murtaugh, a Trump campaign spokesman, accused
Democrats of trying to stop Trump from speaking to voters.
Nevada’s Democratic governor Steve Sisolak has limited in-person
gatherings to 50 people since May as part of efforts to lower
the rate of COVID-19 infections in the state.
"The Governor’s Office had no involvement or communication with
the event organizers or potential hosts regarding the proposed
campaign events advertised by the Trump campaign," Sisolak said
on Twitter.
Trump has held a series of recent campaign rallies in airport
hangars in other states, often in violation of local coronavirus
crowd-size guidance. His rally on Tuesday at an airport in North
Carolina drew thousands, despite state guidelines limiting
outdoor gatherings to 50 people.
Biden's recent public events have been limited to small crowds
in keeping with local safety guidelines.
The White House has said attendees of Trump's rallies are
encouraged to wear masks and that the gatherings are no
different from people who show up to peacefully protest on
American streets.
Madison Mundy, a spokeswoman for the Nevada Democratic Party,
said in a statement: “The fact that Donald Trump was even
considering holding these unsafe events in the midst of a global
pandemic is just the latest example of his poor judgment and
complete disregard for Nevadans’ public health and safety.”
(Reporting by Tim Reid; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Bill
Berkrot)
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