Tulsa, Oklahoma - United States President Donald Trump,
addressing a less-than-full arena for his first political rally
in months, criticized anti-racism protests and defended his
handling of the coronavirus on Saturday in an effort to
reinvigorate his re-election campaign.
Trump, who revels in large crowds and had predicted
his first rally in months would be epic, complained that the
media had discouraged attendees from coming and cited bad
behaviour from protesters outside but did not specifically
acknowledge the fact that many seats in the 19,000-seat BOK
Center arena were empty.
Trump sought to use the event to bring momentum back to his
campaign after coming under fire for his responses to the
coronavirus and to the death of George Floyd, a Black man who
died in the custody of Minneapolis police.
The smaller-than-expected crowd robbed him, at least for
now, of the ability to highlight enthusiasm for his candidacy as
an advantage over his expected Democratic challenger, former
Vice President Joe Biden, who has eschewed large campaign
events.
Trump has brushed aside criticism for his decision to hold
his first rally since March 2 in Tulsa, the site of the
country's bloodiest outbreaks of racist violence against Black
Americans some 100 years ago.
The president, who has encouraged a militaristic response to
the demonstrations nationwide while taking criticism for not
showing more empathy for the plight of Black Americans,
criticized some of the protests.
"The unhinged left-wing mob is trying to vandalize our
history, desecrate our monuments - our beautiful monuments -
tear down our statues and punish, cancel and persecute anyone
who does not conform to their demands for absolute and total
control. We're not conforming," Trump said.
The Republican president is trailing Biden, the presumptive
Democratic presidential nominee, in polls ahead of the November
election. Biden has hammered Trump for his response to the
pandemic.
Trump defended his response, saying that more testing had
led to identifying more cases, seemingly to his chagrin.
"When you do testing to that extent, you're going to ...
find more cases," he said. "So, I said to my people, 'Slow the
testing down, please.'" A White House official said he was
"obviously kidding" with that remark.
Hours before the rally, Trump's campaign announced six
members of its advance team had tested positive for Covid-19.
Only a handful of attendees wore masks inside the arena.
Oklahoma has reported a surge in new Covid-19 infections in
recent days, and the state's department of health warned that
attendees face an increased risk of catching the virus.
"I'm not concerned about it. I think it's mostly a hoax,"
said attendee Will Williams, 46, about the coronavirus,
questioning why Democrats were not more concerned about people
who die from drug overdoses. Williams did not wear a mask.
The president, unusually, suggested that his own speech to
the partially empty arena was not his best.
"So far tonight, I'm average," Trump said.
Trump often feeds off the energy of big groups, something he
has not been able to do since the pandemic paused his rallies.
"I've never seen anything like it. You are warriors. Thank
you," Trump told the crowd, filled with people wearing red T-shirts, the campaign's signature colour.
Trump campaign officials had said prior to the event that
demand far outstripped the capacity of the venue.
Trump and Pence canceled addresses to an expected "overflow"
crowd outside the arena after "protesters interfered with
supporters," Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said.
Television images showed a dozen or so Trump supporters in
the "spillover" area watching the event on a large screen.
There were some scuffles outside the event between Black
Lives Matter protesters and Trump supporters.
"Racists go home," shouted a woman wearing a Black Lives
Matter shirt.
Tulsa Police reported the arrest of a white woman wearing a
T-shirt reading "I can't breathe" from a private event area
after she refused to leave.
A small group of armed men could be seen outside the event.
One of them told reporters they were there in case "antifa"
protesters turned violent, using the acronym for "anti-fascist."
The country's racial divide remains a political
vulnerability for Trump. His "law and order" reaction to the
protests triggered by Floyd's death has put him at odds with the
views of most Americans.
After intense criticism, Trump postponed the rally by a day
so that it did not coincide with the anniversary of the June 19
commemoration of the end of Black slavery in the United States.
On Friday, he threatened unspecified action against any
"protesters, anarchists, agitators, looters or lowlifes" who
traveled to Oklahoma, a warning that his campaign said was not
aimed at peaceful demonstrators. Critics accused Trump of trying
to provoke conflict.
White House and Trump campaign officials had largely
dismissed concerns about the rally's health safety, saying masks
and hand sanitizer would be available. However, participants
were required to waive their right sue if they contract the
coronavirus at the event.