Dayton Daily News

Face masks won’t be required at Trump rally

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Sean Murphy

Oklahoma’s top court rejects a request to require attendees in Tulsa to cover their faces and practice social distancing.

The Oklahoma Supreme Court on Friday rejected a request to require everyone attending President Donald Trump’s rally in Tulsa tonight to wear a face mask and maintain social distancing inside the arena to guard against the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The court ruled that the two local residents who asked that the thousands expected be required to take the precaution­s couldn’t establish that they had a clear legal right to the relief they sought. Oklahoma has had a recent spike in coronaviru­s cases, but in a concurring opinion, two justices noted that the state’s plan to reopen its economy is “permissive, suggestive and discretion­ary.”

“Therefore, for lack of any mandatory language in the (plan), we are compelled to deny the relief requested.”

The request was made by John Hope Franklin for Reconcilia­tion, a nonprofit that promotes racial equality, and the Greenwood Centre, Ltd., which owns commercial real estate, on behalf of the two locals described as having compromise­d immune systems and being particular­ly vulnerable to COVID-19.

Meanwhile, Tulsa’s Republican mayor, G.T. Bynum, rescinded a day-old curfew he had imposed for the area around the BOK Center ahead of the rally. The curfew took effect Thursday night and was supposed to remain until Sunday morning, but Trump tweeted Friday that he had spoken to Bynum and that the mayor told him he would rescind it.

Bynum said he got rid of the curfew at the request of the U.S. Secret Service. In his executive order establishi­ng the curfew, Bynum said he was doing so at the request of law enforcemen­t who had intelligen­ce that “individual­s from organized groups who have been involved in destructiv­e and violent behavior in other states are planning to travel to the city of Tulsa for purposes of causing unrest in and around the rally.”

Bynum didn’t elaborate as to which groups he meant and police Capt. Richard Meulenberg declined to identify any. Although Trump has characteri­zed those who have clashed with law enforcemen­t after George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s as organized, radical-left thugs engaging in domestic terrorism, an Associated Press analysis found the vast majority of people arrested during recent protests in Minneapoli­s and Washington, D.C., were locals.

Trump on Friday morning tweeted: “Any protesters, anarchists, agitators, looters or lowlifes who are going to Oklahoma please understand, you will not be treated like you have been in New York, Seattle, or Minneapoli­s. It will be a much different scene!”

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany clarified later that Trump’s tweet did not refer to all protesters, rather only to those who are “violent.”

Bynum’s order said crowds of 100,000 or more were expected in the area around the rally.

Trump’s campaign manager, Brad Parscale, told Fox News on Friday that those unable to get into the arena are expected to attend what he described as a “festival” outside where the president might also appear. He said he would “probably be wearing a mask” during the event, which Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt has said will be safe.

That has not reassured the arena’s management, who requested a written health and safety plan from the Trump campaign on Thursday. In a statement to Oklahoma City television station KFOR, rally organizers appeared unimpresse­d but said they would review the request.

The Trump campaign said it takes “safety seriously,” noting that organizers are providing masks, hand sanitizers and doing temperatur­e checks for all attendees.

McEnany said she and many other White House staffers would be traveling with Trump to Tulsa and that she wouldn’t wear a mask at the rally, calling it a personal decision and noting that she is regularly tested for COVID-19 because she works in close proximity to Trump. She declined to say whether Trump was taking any additional personal precaution­s ahead of the rally. The nation’s top public health profession­als strongly recommend wearing a mask when social distancing can’t be maintained, as will be the case at today’s rally.

In a Facebook post Tuesday, the mayor confessed to feeling anxious about the potential spread of the coronaviru­s by people attending the rally.

The city’s health director, Dr. Bruce Dart, has said he would like to see the rally postponed, noting that large indoor gatherings are partially to blame for the recent spread of the virus in Tulsa and Tulsa County.

The rally was originally scheduled for Friday, but it was moved back a day following an uproar that it otherwise would have happened on Juneteenth, which marks the end of slavery in the U.S., and in a city where a 1921 white-on-black attack killed as many as 300 people.

Marc Lotter, the Trump campaign’s strategic communicat­ions director, told MSNBC on Friday that the rally “is really a celebratio­n of an America that’s reopening.”

He said the campaign asks that supporters stay away from the rally if they or a family member are in a high risk category for serious complicati­ons from the coronaviru­s.

That message has not been widely echoed by the president or his campaign, which has encouraged supporters to attend, and Lotter said the campaign would not require wearing face coverings.

Oklahoma has seen a recent spike in coronaviru­s cases, setting a daily high on Thursday of 450. Health officials on Friday reported 125 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Tulsa County, which is the most of any county in Oklahoma. Statewide, there were 352 new cases and one new coronaviru­s death reported Friday, raising the state’s total number of confirmed cases since the pandemic began to 9,706 and its death toll to 367.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mike Pellerin waves a Donald Trump campaign flag near a barricade in downtown Tulsa on Friday ahead of President Donald Trump’s campaign rally tonight.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Mike Pellerin waves a Donald Trump campaign flag near a barricade in downtown Tulsa on Friday ahead of President Donald Trump’s campaign rally tonight.

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