Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump shrugs off virus fears ahead of mass Tulsa rally

- By Mario Parker

Donald Trump’s decision to pack thousands of people into an arena for his first campaign rally in three months, intended to reinvigora­te both his re-election effort and the candidate himself, has instead kept the president on the defensive.

The Tulsa, Oklahoma, rally set for Saturday was supposed to signal that America is well on its way back to normal after weathering both the coronaviru­s outbreak and nationwide protests against police brutality. And the event was just as much about lifting the president’s own morale, following broad criticism of his response to the virus crisis and the unrest, according to officials familiar with the campaign.

But instead, the rally has led to new scrutiny of the president’s handling of both the pandemic and the nation’s divisive racial inequities. Health officials in Oklahoma have recommende­d delaying the event, expected to draw at least 100,000 people to the state’s second-largest city, as cases of COVID-19 rise.

Trump already moved the rally back a day after initially scheduling it for Juneteenth, a commemorat­ion of the end of slavery, drawing criticism that he was insensitiv­e to the plight of African Americans. Moreover, Tulsa is the site of one of the worst incidents of racial violence in American history, the 1921 sacking of a prosperous Black neighborho­od named Greenwood by a White mob.

Rallies were the centerpiec­e of Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign and continued through his presidency, providing a platform to reach voters directly, and a trove of voter data. Trump began increasing their frequency late last year -- until the coronaviru­s forced the campaign to suspend them in March.

The virus has damaged Trump’s campaign in another way -- undercutti­ng his message that he should be re-elected because of a booming economy. Social-distancing measures and stay-at-home orders led to the loss of millions of jobs and sent the economy into a tailspin.

Polls show Trump trailing Democrat Joe Biden nationally and in key swing states as voters express concern over the president’s handling of the virus and national protests that erupted over instances of police brutality and racism.

Yet Trump maintains an advantage over Biden: enthusiasm among his core supporters, reflected in polls and turnout at campaign events. The rallies highlight that difference, people close to the president said.

“There’s just a hunger for the rallies. And I enjoy doing them,” Trump said in an interview with Fox News on Wednesday. “It gives energy to everybody. And we have tremendous enthusiasm.”

Trump’s speech on Saturday will likely highlight the economic achievemen­ts of his administra­tion before the pandemic struck.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Nicholas Winford, left, debates Trump supporter Randall Thom on the racial policies of U.S. President Donald Trump outside the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma on Thursday.
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES Nicholas Winford, left, debates Trump supporter Randall Thom on the racial policies of U.S. President Donald Trump outside the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma on Thursday.

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