Las Vegas Review-Journal

GOP claims bias in canceled rallies

For daily updates on the most important coronaviru­s data, go to Sisolak says decision to halt them wasn’t his

- By Rory Appleton

Nevada Republican Party Chairman Michael Mcdonald accused Gov. Steve Sisolak of enforcing “two different sets of rules” on public gatherings during a Thursday news conference, saying the governor has moved to block “peaceful political rallies” held by Republican­s while allowing protests that have ended in violence.

Mcdonald also announced a Republican protest scheduled for 5 p.m. Thursday outside the Sawyer Building.

The Republican­s organized the call after news spread Wednesday of the cancellati­on of two Nevada rallies headlined by President Donald Trump. The Trump campaign said the president will still visit Nevada this weekend, with new event informatio­n set to be released soon.

Sisolak said Wednesday he had no involvemen­t in the decision to shutter the events, which were to be held in airport hangars at the Las Vegas and Reno airports. His office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Mcdonald’s accusation­s on Thursday.

Mcdonald on Thursday accused Sisolak and the state of hypocrisy, saying thousands are allowed to gather shoulder to shoulder on the Las Vegas Strip or Fremont Street while church services remain outlawed.

He pointed to a May protest in Reno that turned violent and a similar June protest in Las Vegas where Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department officer Shay Mikalonis was shot and paralyzed.

Two sets of rules?

“There were no restrictio­ns put on how many people were doing that,” Mcdonald said. “We try to do something peacefully … it’s pretty

simple. The average person — I’m an average person — you’re telling me I can go protest without restrictio­ns, but if I have a rally, I have restrictio­ns. It doesn’t make sense. Two sets of rules.”

Trump Victory regional spokesman Keith Schipper added that Sisolak has allowed Democrats to politicall­y assemble but not Republican­s. He pointed to neighborin­g Arizona as a state in which similar Trump rallies have gone off without a hitch.

Sisolak’s COVID-19 mitigation

directives specify that no gathering may exceed 50 people. His office pointed out that the White House’s own recommenda­tions for Nevada specify crowds should not exceed 25 people in Washoe County and 10 in Clark County.

Reno airport says no

Trump’s planned Reno stop was shuttered after the Reno-tahoe Airport Authority notified the private hangar planning to host it that doing so would violate its lease agreement. The authority stressed there was no political motivation behind its decision, saying the lease agreement requires all tenants to obey state and

local guidelines.

Asked about the cancellati­on in Las Vegas, Schipper said it was his understand­ing Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport told the campaign it could not hold an event at Cirrus Aviation, but he was not sure. The airport has said it never received a request for a Trump campaign event and could therefore not cancel one.

Asked if the GOP had specific evidence Sisolak was involved with the airports’ decisions, Schipper did not provide any.

Schipper said that if reporters request public documents from the governor’s office, it may show some involvemen­t, as it did during an Evangelica­ls for Trump rally held by the campaign in August.

That event, held at the Ahern Hotel, was not shut down, but the Ahern was fined $11,000 for being out of compliance with the state’s gathering rules. Public documents obtained by the Review-journal showed the governor’s office urging city officials to take action against the event.

Not a stunt

Schipper and Mcdonald also denied the rallies were some sort of political stunt to provoke a conflict with Sisolak.

Democrats have accused Republican­s of endangerin­g public safety by holding such gatherings in the midst of a pandemic, while Republican­s say the Democrats are using COVID-19 as an excuse used to keep Democratic nominee Joe Biden from frequent public appearance­s.

State Democrats have all but ended in-person campaignin­g, while local Republican­s have continued to hold small gatherings that rub up against or even exceed the 50-person rule in addition to the larger-scale planned rallies.

The weekend swing would be Trump’s first in-person visit to Nevada since just before the February caucuses.

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