Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

President raises cash, tends to base

Maskless Trump visits campaign battlegrou­nd as COVID cases spike

- By Jonathan Lemire and Bill Barrow

MIAMI — President Donald Trump made it to the critical battlegrou­nd state of Florida on Friday to raise campaign cash and tend to issues of high interest there for his base supporters. But his efforts to relaunch travel after a hiatus caused by a surge in coronaviru­s cases hit a new snag as his campaign canceled a weekend rally in New Hampshire, citing a tropical storm threatenin­g the area.

What is the first thing that everybody noticed as the president arrived? Trump wasn’t wearing a mask as he stepped off Air Force One at Miami Internatio­nal Airport. Nor were any of the people exiting the aircraft with him.

South Florida has emerged as one of the world’s hot spots, reporting 11,433 new cases on Friday alone, the state’s second highest single-day total for cases. But only a handful of masks were evident as Trump exited the aircraft and mingled briefly — not socially distanced — with politician­s there to welcome him on the hot tarmac.

Miami-Dade County has an order mandating mask usage.

Brief comments were exchanged between Trump and some local politician­s, including Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez, before Trump departed for the U.S. Southern Command, where he received a briefing and spoke about U.S. counternar­cotics operations.

He also attended a roundtable at Iglesia

Doral Jesus Worship Center in nearby Doral to show support for Venezuelan expatriate­s seeking the ouster of Nicholas Maduro, and made an unexpected stop by his resort in Doral.

At the campaign-organized event focusing on Venezuela, Trump portrayed himself as tough on drugs and a champion of Venezuela, according to a report in the Miami Herald.

“We are going to be fighting for Venezuelan­s,” Trump said. “Cuba and Venezuela, we have it very much under control.”

He was accompanie­d by Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, Homeland Security Acting Secretary Chad F. Wolf, national security adviser Robert O’Brien and Republican Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart for the briefing on the results of a counternar­cotics operation in the Caribbean launched in March.

Navy Adm. Craig Faller said the operation has disrupted 122 metric tons of cocaine heading to the U.S. and more than 18,000 pounds of marijuana.

Trump criticized former President Barack Obama’s efforts to lift some sanctions against Cuba and warned that the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, would take a similar approach and even embrace socialism domestical­ly.

Trump reversed some but not all of Obama’s efforts to normalize relations with Cuba, an ally of the Maduro regime.

“Republican­s are the party of freedom and Democrats are the party of socialism and worse,” Trump said.

Trump also attended a $580,600-per-couple fundraiser in Hillsboro Beach. At the fundraiser, guests were scheduled to be tested for COVID-19 before interactin­g with the president, recognizin­g the peril of visiting the area considered one of the nation’s hot spots.

Although Trump arrived in Miami under sunny skies earlier in the day, storms rumbled through Broward County as Air Force One approached Fort Lauderdale­Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport. Still, small clusters of supporters awaited the president on the tarmac before the convoy headed to the private fundraiser, which comes as Trump has trailed his challenger Biden’s fundraisin­g totals for the last two months. Biden and the Democratic Party hauled in $141 million in June, compared with $131 million reported by the Trump campaign.

The president’s re-election’s effort had nearly $300 million in its campaign war chest at the end of June. The Biden campaign did not release its cash-on-hand figure, but it is believed to be below Trump’s.

Trump’s motorcade drove past about 20 spectators near the Opal Towers condominiu­ms on Hillsboro Mile just after 6:30 p.m.

Outside, spectators in masks mused about the cost of the dinner, which they heard was a half-million per plate.

“It better be a nice steak or something,” said Joseph Kabas, a resident in Opal Towers East.

Saturday’s New Hampshire event was to mark Trump’s first political rally after a multiweek pause caused by a nationwide surge in coronaviru­s cases.

Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters the Portsmouth rally — slated to be held in an aircraft hangar open on one side — would be delayed by a week or two.

The New Hampshire event had been scheduled after aides spent weeks studying what went wrong at Trump’s last rally — a sparsely attended event in Tulsa three weeks ago. That was meant to be a massive, defiant return to the political stage but instead produced a sea of empty seats and questions about the campaign’s ability to attract people to large events in a pandemic.

“With Tropical Storm Fay heading towards the Great State of New Hampshire this weekend, we are forced to reschedule our Portsmouth, New Hampshire Rally at the Portsmouth Internatio­nal Airport at Pease,” Trump tweeted. “Stay safe, we will be there soon!”

Even before the storm threat emerged, campaign officials had acknowledg­ed that it was unclear how many people would attend the New Hampshire rally. Conceding that another sparse crowd would raise questions about the future of Trump’s rallies, the campaign had taken additional steps to make attendees feel safe.

Rain was forecast for early Saturday in Portsmouth, and rally-goers often gather hours ahead of the event to get a good view of the president. For the rally’s scheduled start time Saturday evening, Weather.Com forecast the weather would be partly cloudy with a 15% chance of rain.

There was strong opposition to Trump’s rally among some prominent New Hampshire Republican­s. Judd Gregg, who previously served New Hampshire both as a governor and senator, bluntly called Trump’s appearance “a mistake.”

“New Hampshire has been extremely aggressive under the governor in containing the virus,” Gregg said in an interview with The Associated Press, confirming that he had not planned to attend either. “People are concerned about folks bringing the problem to us.”

Trump, trailing in the polls, is eager to signal that normal life can resume despite a rampaging virus that has killed more than 130,000 Americans.

His visit to Florida takes him to terrain where COVID-19’s surge threatens his hold on a must-win state and raises questions about Republican aims to hold their nominating convention in Jacksonvil­le next month.

Unlike the rally in Tulsa, which was held indoors where the virus more easily circulates, the rally in Portsmouth was to be partially outdoors, held in an airplane hangar open on one side with the crowd spilling out onto the tarmac before Air Force One.

“All of Donald Trump’s rallies and all of his events are electric,” said campaign spokespers­on Hogan Gidley. “The president wants to go in there and talk about all the accomplish­ments he’s done in his first term and how he’s made people’s lives better.”

Moreover, while masks were distribute­d in Tulsa, few rally-goers wore them after weeks of Trump deriding their use. This time, the campaign has strongly encouraged their use.

The venue was to be significan­tly smaller than the cavernous Tulsa arena, and aides had deliberate­ly set lower expectatio­ns for crowd size. Before the Oklahoma event, which spurred days of protests, campaign manager Brad Parscale boasted that a million ticket requests had been received. The Tulsa fire marshal said 6,000 people attended.

New Hampshire has had a relatively low number of COVID-19 cases, while those in Oklahoma were rising before Trump arrived. Oklahoma health officials said the rally and accompanyi­ng protests “likely contribute­d” to a surge in infections in the city. Several campaign staffers and Secret Service agents tested positive for the virus.

Despite the risks, the Trump campaign believes it needs to return to the road, both to animate the president, who draws energy from his crowds, and to inject life into a campaign that’s facing a strong challenge from Biden.

On Friday, Biden pointed to Florida’s rising coronaviru­s cases, saying, “It is clear that Trump’s response — ignore, blame others, and distract — has come at the expense of Florida families.”

The choice to hold the rally in New Hampshire, where the president is trailing significan­tly, in part reflected the current lack of options, said four campaign officials and Republican­s close to the endeavor who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss internal deliberati­ons.

Battlegrou­nd states with Democratic governors, such as Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, have indicated they wouldn’t waive health regulation­s to allow large gatherings, though the campaign will be willing to legally contest that in time, according to the officials.

 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? President Donald Trump arrives at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL President Donald Trump arrives at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport.
 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump claps after delivering a speech about counternar­cotics operations at U.S. Southern Command on Friday.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump claps after delivering a speech about counternar­cotics operations at U.S. Southern Command on Friday.

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