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Trump threatens Tulsa protesters as mayor lifts curfew

The president’s social media post comes after Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum issued an executive order Thursday declaring a civil emergency and imposing curfews for parts of downtown to be in effect before and after Trump’s rally Saturday in the city’s 19,000-seat BOK Center and a 40,000-capacity convention center nearby.

However, on Friday afternoon Trump announced the curfew would be lifted on Friday night and Saturday night for supporters attending the rally.

„Enjoy yourselves – thank you to Mayor Bynum!“ Trump wrote on Twitter, adding the mayor informed him of the change in plans.

The Trump campaign received another boost Friday afternoon when the Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled that Saturday’s in-person rally could go ahead as planned. The court dismissed a lawsuit filed earlier this week that argued social distancing and mask wearing should be required at the rally.

In his previous executive order, Bynum also revealed he had “received information from the Tulsa Police Department and other law enforcement agencies that shows that individuals from organized groups who have been involved in destructive and violent behavior in other States are planning to travel to the City of Tulsa for purposes of causing unrest in and around the rally.”

Bynum noted that protests have already “been planned in response to” Trump’s rally, and black community leaders have expressed fears about episodes of violence resulting from the campaign event — which overlaps with a two-day local celebration of Juneteenth, a holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States.

The rally was initially scheduled to take place Friday on Juneteenth, but Trump last week announced it would instead be held Saturday after facing significant criticism for the initial choice of date.

Trump was also roundly rebuked for the campaign’s decision to organize the rally in Tulsa, the city where white mobs in 1921 burned a prosperous black community in what has come to be considered among the worst incidents of racial violence in American history.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany did not specify Friday which punitive actions Trump was alluding to in his tweet, and denied that he was arguing the constitutional right to peaceably assemble should not apply to his rallies.

“What the president was noting is that there were inexcusable scenes that we saw play out in New York and Seattle and Minneapolis, and that we would not see Tulsa, Oklahoma, look that way,” she told reporters at a White House press briefing.

McEnany also asserted Trump’s vague threat was not intended to apply to all protesters, such as those gathering peacefully. “What he was meaning are violent protesters, anarchists [and] looters,” she said.

Trump has advocated an aggressive, militaristic approach to quash nationwide protests and riots in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, by Minneapolis police in May.

Earlier this month, Trump threatened to deploy active-duty troops to put an end to the racial unrest, while police officers and National Guard troops violently dispersed largely peaceful protesters in front of the White House to clear the way for a presidential photo opportunity in front of a church.

Marc Lotter, director of strategic communications for the president’s reelection campaign, defended Trump’s tweet Friday, telling MSNBC that “if we see what we’ve seen in other cities with rioting, looting, setting buildings on fire and physical violence, then that’s going to be something that would be met by police, and it would be handled appropriately.”

Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale played down concerns of a confrontation. “I’ve been here since Day One, and I found all Trump supporters to be really caring, loving people that care about this country,” he told Fox News.

Parscale also claimed, however, the campaign was aware of “people coming in that are trying to disrupt” and “trying to create scenes” at Saturday’s rally. The protesters, he argued, “want that moment where CNN or some other fake news media can try to make it look like a Trump supporter is not a loving and caring person.”

Lara Trump, a senior adviser to the Trump campaign and the president’s daughter-in-law, similarly insisted that “Trump supporters are, by and large, very peaceful people.” But she nevertheless lamented that “anybody would ever consider doing this just to cause chaos and destruction and violence.”

“I just think it’s such a shame that anyone would hijack anything,” she told Fox News. “You saw how these agitators hijacked the peaceful protest, and they turned them into riots and into burning down buildings and destroying small businesses, and it devolved into violence very quickly.”

Later Friday morning, the president’s focus appeared to shift away from potential conflict as he returned to his frequent fixation on his rallies’ attendance levels.

“Big crowds and lines already forming in Tulsa. My campaign hasn’t started yet. It starts on Saturday night in Oklahoma!” Trump tweeted — even though his campaign billed a June 2019 event in Orlando as its official 2020 kickoff.

Still, the repeated references by the president and his top political aides to the possibility of a clash on the streets of Tulsa ratcheted up anxieties related to Saturday’s rally — Trump’s first since the end of widespread coronavirus lockdown orders.

Oklahoma reported 450 new COVID-19 cases Thursday, a record for the state, and public health officials have warned attendees are at a heightened risk of contracting the disease in densely packed convention centers.

Organizers will provide temperature checks, masks and hand sanitizer before the event to rallygoers, who are required to pledge not to sue the Trump campaign should they become infected.

Source: politico.com
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