The Day

Tulsa rally size raises question about risk in age of virus

- By AAMER MADHANI, JONATHAN LEMIRE and ALEXANDRA JAFFE

Washington — President Donald Trump’s paltry crowd for his weekend campaign rally in Oklahoma raises new questions about politics in the age of coronaviru­s: Maybe pandemic-scarred Americans just aren’t ready to risk exposure for close-up engagement in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Only about a third of the 19,000 seats in BOK Center were filled for the rally, despite boasts by Trump and his campaign team that they had received more than 1 million ticket requests.

With all 50 states well into reopening their economies, Americans are now creating their own individual risk budgets and calculatin­g what sort of activities are worth hazarding when coronaviru­s infections are still surging in some areas of the country.

At a moment when many Americans are still weighing the risks and rewards of mundane activities like a meal at a restaurant, a trip to the grocery store or a visit to the salon, the idea of attending a campaign rally — more than four months before Election

Day — may seem like an extraneous, if not perilous, activity to some.

“There was the presumptio­n that the risk calculus was being made very, very differentl­y by Trump supporters and was broad enough to fill up that arena,” said Matt Bennett, executive vice president at the center-left Washington think-tank, the Third Way. “It just turns out it wasn’t.”

Trump and his campaign attributed the low attendance to worries about potential violence and media hype about the dangers of the virus. Left-leaning pranksters claimed they were behind many of the more than 1 million requests for tickets, giving Trump’s campaign the false sense that the event was going to have a massive overflow crowd.

But the relatively sparse crowd suggests that even in a rock-ribbed Republican state like Oklahoma, Americans of all political stripes still are cautious as they emerge from lockdown.

According to a June poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, Democrats are more likely than Republican­s to say they’re very worried about themselves or someone in their family being infected with the virus.

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