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President Trump threatens protesters ahead of Tulsa rally

PoliticsPresident Trump threatens protesters ahead of Tulsa rally

Writing on Twitter, Trump lumped together “protesters, anarchists, agitators, looters or lowlifes” and said they would not be afforded what he’s decried as gentile treatment if they gather outside his Tulsa event. It came the morning after he used a blatantly false video of young children to decry media coverage of American race relations, a move that drew a rebuke from Twitter.

The messages, which came as the nation marks the day in 1865 that the last enslaved Black people in the US learned they had been freed from bondage, made no attempt at striking a unifying or commemorative tone. Instead, Trump used his platform to heighten the drama surrounding his return to the campaign trail and warn those who oppose him to stay away.

“Please understand, you will not be treated like you have been in New York, Seattle, or Minneapolis. It will be a much different scene!” he wrote on Friday morning.

It was a turnabout from Trump’s declaration earlier this month that he is an “ally of all peaceful protesters,” though not necessarily a surprising one given his repeated condemnation of demonstrations that, in some instances, turned violent.

As he heads into Saturday’s rally, Trump is hoping to reset his campaign after a rocky stretch that has included widespread disapproval of his handling of racial demonstrations, a global public health crisis, two Supreme Court losses and, most recently, a stinging rebuke by his former national security adviser.

“Big crowds and lines already forming in Tulsa. My campaign hasn’t started yet. It starts on Saturday night in Oklahoma!” he wrote.

Indeed, outside the Bank of Oklahoma Center in Tulsa, a line began forming earlier this week with rally-goers enthusiastically awaiting the President’s arrival.

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Trump initially planned to hold the rally on Friday, but changed the date after learning it fell on Juneteenth, the historic anniversary of enslaved people in Texas learning they were free nearly three years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.

On Friday, the White House issued a statement marking the holiday, writing it “reminds us of both the unimaginable injustice of slavery and the incomparable joy that must have attended emancipation. It is both a remembrance of a blight on our history and a celebration of our Nation’s unsurpassed ability to triumph over darkness.”

Yet the message of “triumph over darkness” was hardly visible on Trump’s Twitter feed fewer than 30 minutes later, when he tweeted his threat against protesters.

Trump also complained about a recent Fox News poll showing him trailing his Democratic presidential election rival Joe Biden by double digits, recent Democratic political advertising, the Supreme Court’s decision on immigration, and a message stating: “THE SILENT MAJORITY IS STRONGER THAN EVER BEFORE.”

Descendants of Tulsa's 1921 race massacre seek justice as the nation confronts a racist past
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal this week, Trump said neither he nor his political advisers were aware of the meaning of Juneteenth when scheduling the rally in Tulsa. He said a black Secret Service agent explained it to him.
Trump eventually moved the rally by a day. But both its location and its timing remain controversial. Tulsa is the site of some of the worst racist violence in American history, a fact Trump has not addressed.

And the rally is being convened despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Oklahoma recently reported its largest single day increase in coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic, and the arena where the rally will take place is requesting a written plan from the campaign “detailing the steps the event will institute for health and safety, including those related to social distancing.”

The Trump campaign said afterward it takes “safety seriously,” and noted hand sanitizer, temperature checks and masks will be provided to attendees, though actually wearing a mask won’t be required.

“This will be a Trump rally, which means a big, boisterous, excited crowd,” the campaign said.

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