The New Zealand Herald

Trump vulnerabil­ities on show at Tulsa rally

Divisive, detached speech shows US President has little to campaign on

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US President Donald Trump’s return to the campaign trail was designed to show strength and enthusiasm heading into the critical final months before an election that will decide whether he remains in the White House.

Instead, his weekend rally in Oklahoma highlighte­d growing vulnerabil­ities and crystallis­ed a divisive re-election message that largely ignores broad swathes of voters — independen­ts, suburban women and people of colour — who could play a crucial role in choosing Trump or Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

“There’s really only one strategy left for him, and that is to propel that rage and anger and try to split the society and see if he can have a tribal leadership win here,” former Trump adviser-turned-critic Anthony Scaramucci said on CNN’s Reliable Sources.

The president did not offer even a token reference to national unity in remarks that spanned more than an hour and 40 minutes at his selfdescri­bed campaign relaunch — as the nation grappled with surging coronaviru­s infections, the worst unemployme­nt since the Great Depression and sweeping civil unrest.

Nor did Trump mention George Floyd, the African American man whose death at the hands of Minnesota police late last month sparked a national uprising over police brutality. But he did add new fuel to the nation’s culture wars, defending Confederat­e statues while making racist references to the coronaviru­s, which originated in China and which he called “kung flu”.

He also said Democratic Representa­tive Ilhan Omar, who came to the US as a refugee as a child, “would like to make the government of our country just like the country from where she came, Somalia”.

Trump won the presidency in 2016 with a similar red-meat message aimed largely at energising conservati­ves and white working-class men. But less than four months before early voting begins in some states, there are signs that independen­ts and educated voters — particular­ly suburban women — have turned against him. Republican strategist­s increasing­ly believe that only a dramatic turnaround in the economy can revive his chances.

“It’s bad,” said Republican operative Rick Tyler, a frequent Trump critic. “There’s literally nothing to run on. The only thing he can say is that Biden is worse.”

But the day after Trump’s Tulsa rally, the president’s message was almost an afterthoug­ht as aides tried to explain smaller-than-expected crowd that left the president outraged. The campaign had been betting big on Tulsa. Trump’s political team spent days proclaimin­g that more than 1 million people had requested tickets. They also ignored health warnings from the White House coronaviru­s task force and Oklahoma officials, eager to host an event that would help him move past the civil rights protests and the coronaviru­s itself.

His first rally in 110 days was meant to be a defiant display of political force to help energise Trump’s spirits, try out some attacks on Biden and serve as a powerful symbol of American’s re-opening.

Instead, the city fire marshal’s office reported a crowd of just less than 6200 in the 19,000-seat BOK Center, and at least six staff members who helped set up the event tested positive for the coronaviru­s. The vast majority of the attendees, including Trump, did not wear face masks as recommende­d by the Trump administra­tion’s health experts.

After the rally, the president berated aides over the turnout. He fumed he had been led to believe he would see huge crowds in deep-red Oklahoma, according to two White House and campaign officials. There was no sign of an imminent staff shakeup, but members of Trump’s inner circle angrily questioned how campaign manager Brad Parscale and senior aides could so wildly overpromis­e and under-deliver.

Publicly, Trump’s team scrambled to blame the crowd size on media coverage and protesters outside the venue, but the small crowds of prerally demonstrat­ors were largely peaceful. Tulsa police reported just one arrest.

It’s unclear when Trump will hold his next rally.

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