The Oklahoman

Key takeaways from Trump's Tulsa rally

- USA Today

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump held his first campaign rally since March in Tulsa on Saturday after days of speculatio­n about the impact the event would have on spreading the coronaviru­s and how large the crowd would be.

The president used the opportunit­y to brag about his corona virus response while downplayin­g its threat, slamming the media and some of his Democratic rivals, and defending confederat­e statues.

Here are some of the takeaways from Trump's rally:

`Slow the testing down'

Trump boasted of his administra­tion' s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic and again blamed China for spreading the virus.

Corona virus cases have spiked in several states around the country, including in Oklahoma, the site of the rally. Local health officials had called for the rally to be postponed out of concern about the spread of the virus.

“COVID. To be specific, COVID-19. That name gets further and further away from China, as opposed to calling it the Chinese virus,” he said.

Trump said he told his administra­tion “slow the testing down, please,” reiteratin­g his argument that higher test numbers l ed to higher case counts.

In fact, in many states seeing spike sin cases, the increase in infections is outpacing t he number of new tests. As the country reopens, medical experts say one of the

keys to curbing the spread of COVID-19 is widespread testing so people who have the disease can self-quarantine to avoid infecting others at workplaces, schools and other public places. At the White House, for example, aides are tested daily.

The president also suggested, without evidence, that COVID-19 is being overreport­ed. Experts, including members of Trump's own corona virus task force, have said they believe COVID-19 cases are being under-reported.

Smaller crowd, few masks in use

Trump's rally boasted a smaller crowd than his usual campaign events, with much of the upper sections of the 19,000- seat BOK Center empty.

An event outside was canceled and broken down by t he Secret Service before the president started speaking inside because of low attendance.

Before the event, the Trump campaign had boasted 1 million tickets were requested, and Trump predicted there would not be an empty seat.

Trump's campaign blamed the low turnout, as well as the scratched event, on “radical protesters” as well as members of the media, who they claimed “attempted to frighten off the President's supporters.”

Journalist­s on the ground have disputed claims that large numbers of people were turned away because of rowdy protesters.

Trump, who often kicks off his campaign rallies by crowing about the size of the crowd, was forced to use his high-stakes rally to explain why turnout was less than expected.

Echoing a line from his campaign manager, Trump blamed the smaller- thanexpect­ed crowds on media coverage leading up to the event and blamed protesters for his decision not to deliver expected remarks at the scheduled outdoor overflow event.

“You are warriors,” Trump told the crowd, suggesting that they had turned out despite the coverage leading up to the rally. “I've been watching the fake news for weeks now. And everything is negative. Today it was like, I've never seen anything like it.”

Additional­ly, the majority of attendees did not wear masks despite the campaign handing them out. But wearing masks was not enforced. Several lawmakers at the rally did not wear masks.

`I did a phenomenal job'

Trump shrugged off the looming threat from the coronaviru­s, despite several states reporting record-high numbers of cases and hospitaliz­ations in the past few days, including Oklahoma.

Local health officials had called for the rally to be postponed out of concern about the spread of the virus.

He continued to boast of his administra­tion's response to the pandemic.

“We – I – did a phenomenal job with it,” Trump declared.

Trump said he told his administra­tion “Slow t he testing down, please,” reiteratin­g his argument that higher test numbers led to higher case counts.

He imitated a doctor talking about a 10-year-old with

“sniffles” who would conclude “that's a case!”

The president said the governor of New Jersey told him only one person under 18 died, which the president said shows young people have a “great immune system”

“Let's open the schools, please!” he said.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, t he nation's top infectious disease expert and a member of the president's coronaviru­s task force, said earlier this week while more testing does result in more confirmed cases, the surge in some states “cannot be explained by increased testing.”

Coronaviru­s slur

The president at one point also called COVID- 19 t he “kung flu” and the “Chinese virus.”

“It' s a disease without question,” Trump told the audience. “I can name 1 9 different versions of names. Many call it a virus, which it is. Many call it a flu. What's the difference?”

Public health officials have discourage­d terms that associate a pandemic with a place. Trump frequently used“Chinese virus” in the early weeks of the pandemic but stopped using it as frequently.

One of his own advisers, Kellyanne Conway, in March called report sofa White House official referring to the coronaviru­s as the “kung flu” as “highly offensive.”

COVID-19 deaths neared 120,000 Saturday in the U.S.

Confederat­e statues defended

Trump's rally, just a day after June teen than di na city with the site of one of the worst race massacres in U.S. history, defended confederat­e monuments around the country.

Trump claimed the left and protesters desired only “to demolish our heritage” as demonstrat­ors have been tearing down confederat­e statues during weeks of protests over racial injustice.

Pro testers continue to target historical symbols of the Confederac­y. Late Friday, protesters in Washington, D.C., and in Raleigh, North Carolina, toppled statues.

The protests were sparked by the killing of George Floyd, a Black man whose neck was pinned under the knee of a white police officer for nearly nine minutes in May.

Trump barely spoke about r ace and did not mention Floyd.

Democratic politician­s, critics targeted

Trump used his rally to hit back at some of his Democratic critics, including Washington, D. C ., Mayor Muriel Bowser and congresswo­men Alexandria O ca si o-Co rte zan dIlh an Omar.

The president swiped at Bowser for the Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion sin Washington and OcasioCort­ez for her environmen­tal views.

Bowser responded, tweeting that there' s“a lot of empty room” in Trump' s head, “just like tonight's half empty Tulsa arena.”

Trump called Omar a “hate-filled America-bashing socialist” whose goal is to make America “just like the country from which she came, Somalia. No government, no police, no safety, no nothing.”

Omar, a representa­tive from Minnesota, fled Somalia as a refugee and has been a citizen since age 17. Her father died from COVID-19 a few days ago.

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