The Arizona Republic

Trump campaign rally put on hold

- Michael Collins USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s last political rally, in Oklahoma, showed the risks of campaignin­g in the age of coronaviru­s.

His planned rally in New Hampshire could be a test run for how such big campaign events will go forward in the future – if they go on at all.

“This rally is really a make-or-break moment for Trump,” said Dan Eberhart, an energy company executive and GOP fundraiser. “This needs to be a success to prove out the strategy that in this kind of COVID environmen­t, these kinds of rallies still have legs, still have purpose and that this type of campaignin­g can continue.”

So far the latest push isn’t going according to plan: The White House and Trump campaign announced Friday that the New Hampshire rally expected on Saturday would be postponed. Trump officials cited Tropical Storm Fay and vowed to reschedule soon.

Trump’s New Hampshire rally, which was to be held at an airport hangar at the Portsmouth Internatio­nal Airport at Pease, was planned as the president is trying to recharge his struggling campaign as coronaviru­s cases spike and polls show him trailing the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden.

The event was shadowed by questions over what went wrong at his rally last month in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Even amid lingering concerns over the coronaviru­s pandemic, campaign officials hyped that event and boasted that they had received requests for 1 million tickets. Turnout was far smaller than expected, with just 6,200 people showing up and leaving Trump addressing a lot of empty seats in a 19,000-capacity arena.

What’s more, eight campaign staffers on the advance team and two Secret Service agents who worked in Tulsa ahead of that event tested positive for coronaviru­s. Tulsa’s top health official said Wednesday that the rally and the protests that accompanie­d it might have contribute­d to the city’s recent surge in coronaviru­s cases.

The event that had been set for Saturday would have been Trump’s second in-person rally since much of the country went into lockdown. The number of coronaviru­s cases in the U.S. has topped 3.1 million; more than 133,000 Americans have died.

Holding political rallies while much of the nation is concerned about coronaviru­s poses real risks for Trump, said David McLennan, a political science professor at Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina.

“He is a visual reminder of the coronaviru­s as he speaks,” McLennan said. “He’s speaking in front of big, often unmasked crowds – and sometimes not-so-big crowds – at a time when everybody is paying attention to these (coronaviru­s) numbers.”

Trump is trying to replicate the campaign formula that worked well for him in 2016, said Dante Scala, a political science professor at the University of New Hampshire.

“The old saying is campaigns are ultimately reflection­s of the candidate,” Scala said. “I think for the candidate’s own morale, he feels the need to be out and about and doing these sorts of things that served him well the last time he ran for office.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump’s rally in New Hampshire has been canceled as a storm moves across the region.
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump’s rally in New Hampshire has been canceled as a storm moves across the region.

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