Donald Trump to hold rally in Oklahoma, first since coronavirus pandemic began
Donald Trump
will hold a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, next Friday – his first since since
states began shutting down in response to the coronavirus pandemic, which has
claimed more than 110,000 lives in the US.
The 19 June
rally will likely rattle some public health experts, as coronavirus infections
rise in about a dozen states. On Wednesday, the US approached nearly 2 million
confirmed cases.
Trump’s
signature rallies often draw tens of thousands of people but have been on
hiatus since 2 March because of the coronavirus. The president’s campaign has
been eager to resume them as it tries to move past the pandemic, even as cases
continue to rise in some parts of the country.
A Trump
campaign spokesperson tweeted a movie trailer-style video earlier Wednesday
that advertised: “This month we’re back.”
“A beautiful new venue, brand new. We’re looking
forward to it,” Trump said during a White House event. “They’ve done a great
job with Covid, as you know, the state of Oklahoma.”
The
announcement, which comes amid sweeping protests against racism and police
brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death, also raised eyebrows for its
date – a day known as Juneteenth, which commemorates the end of slavery – as
well as its location in Tulsa, a city with a troubling history of racial
violence.
Tulsa’s 1921
race massacre saw the destruction of black businesses and residences at the
hands of angry, white mobs, and has been described as “the single worst
incident of racial violence in American history.”
Trump’s
announcement comes as the president has criticized the Floyd protests and referred
to those demonstrating against police brutality as “thugs”.
Oklahoma, a
reliably Republican state which Trump won in 2016, was among the earliest
states to begin loosening coronavirus restrictions, with salons, spas and
barbershops reopening in late April. The Republican governor Kevin Stitt’s most
recent reopening phase places no limits on group gathering sizes as of 1 June,
and leaves the decision about how closely to adhere to social distancing
guidelines up to business owners and local officials.
According to
Johns Hopkins data, the overall death toll in Oklahoma stands at 356.
The president
said he would first hold a rally in Oklahoma before moving on to other states
like Florida, Arizona and North Carolina, where the Republican national
convention was originally supposed to be held.
Coronavirus
hospitalizations are currently on the rise in Arizona and North Carolina, which
could intensify public health concerns about resuming the campaign rallies.
While the
rallies will likely spark public health concerns, some of the president’s
allies have argued the recent protests, which have attracted thousands of
people, could shield the rallies from potential criticism.
Some on
Twitter compared Trump’s decision to hold the rally in Tulsa on Juneteenth to
Ronald Reagan’s choice to launch his 1980 campaign with a speech lauding
“states rights” near the site of the notorious “Mississippi burning” murder of
civil rights workers.
In 1964,
three civil rights workers were abducted and killed by the Ku Klux Klan, just
south-west of Philadelphia, Mississippi, and surreptitiously buried in a dam.
Reagan
delivered a campaign speech within walking distance of the dam, proclaiming “I
believe in state’s rights.” His language echoed that of white Southerners who
used the phrase to justify segregation.
It remained
unclear if the campaign’s choice to hold the rally on Juneteenth was
intentional.
The Trump
campaign appeared aware of the significance of the president holding the rally
on Juneteenth.
Responding to
a Bloomberg reporter, a Trump campaign advisor wrote that “Republicans are
proud of the history of Juneteenth”.
The president
has acknowledged the date before. In 2017, Trump released a statement, saying:
“Melania and I send our warmest greetings to all those celebrating Juneteenth,
a historic day recognizing the end of slavery.” That year, Trump also delivered
a rambling speech during Black History month, calling the famous abolitionist
Frederick Douglass “an example of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is
being recognized more and more, I notice”.




