GOP reportedly eyes moving part of convention outside
With coronavirus cases surging in Florida, Republicans are planning to move the three nights of their national convention from an indoor arena to an outdoor venue in Jacksonville.
However, it’s still unclear how many people will be allowed to attend the events, people familiar with the discussions said Tuesday.
Officials met Monday night to discuss shifting the events of Aug. 25, 26, and 27 out of the VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena, where the indoor program was scheduled to take place, including President Donald Trump’s acceptance speech on the final night.
The two outdoor options they have been examining are near the arena, the people familiar with the discussions said.
Officials emphasized the plans could change.
Officials remain uncertain about whether a capacity crowd would be allowed to attend outdoor events, or if there would be restrictions to prevent people from being too close to one another.
The plan to move the activities outdoors was made after a meeting that Trump held with political advisers Monday evening. It’s a change from what Trump had envisioned when he forced the Republican National Committee to abandon plans in Charlotte, N.C., because officials there refused to guarantee the type of pre-coronavirus event the president wanted, absent restrictions on social distancing.
But as Florida deals with a new outbreak of virus infections, Jacksonville presents more serious challenges than Charlotte did.
Many Republican elected officials and delegates, responding to a survey from the New York Times, said they would take a wait-andsee approach on whether they will attend. Other delegates, however, said they definitely would attend and would be honored to help renominate Trump.
Mayor Lenny Curry of Jacksonville was asked in a news conference Tuesday about Republicans remaining wary about traveling to the convention, given the health risks that could be involved.
“We have many weeks till the convention,” Curry said. “We’re monitoring the situation and we’ll plan accordingly, based on hospitalizations, community spread, et cetera.”
The mayor said he tested negative for the virus. He previously had been self-isolating with his family after he learned he’d been exposed to someone who was infected.
The planned move outdoors for nighttime events is the latest complication for GOP convention officials. Fundraisers in Jacksonville have described a challenging environment as donors balk at giving to an event threatened by a health crisis, or donating a second time.
Also, the city is requiring facial coverings in any public space where social distancing isn’t possible, and the host committee said every attendee within the convention perimeter “will be tested and temperature checked each day.”