TULSA, Okla. – President Donald Trump launched his comeback rally amid a pandemic on Saturday by declaring that "the silent majority is stronger than ever before," but what was meant to be a show of political force was instead met with thousands of empty seats and new coronavirus cases on his campaign staff.
Ignoring health warnings, Trump went through with his first rally in 110 days in Tulsa, one of the largest indoor gatherings in the world during a coronavirus outbreak that has killed more than 120,000 Americans, put 40 million out of work and upended Trump's re-election bid.
In the hours before the event, crowds were significantly lighter than expected, and campaign officials scrapped plans for Trump and Vice President Mike Pence to first address an overflow space outdoors. About a third of the seats at his indoor rally were empty.
Trump tried to explain away the crowd size by blaming the media for declaring "don't go, don't come, don't do anything" and by insisting there were protesters outside who were "doing bad things." But the small crowds of pre-rally demonstrators were largely peaceful, and Tulsa police reported just one arrest Saturday afternoon.
"We begin our campaign," Trump thundered as he took the stage. "The silent majority is stronger than ever before."
Just hours before the rally, Trump's campaign revealed that six staff members who were helping set up for the event had tested positive for the coronavirus. Campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh said that "quarantine procedures were immediately implemented," and that neither the affected staffers nor anyone who was in immediate contact with them would attend the event.
News of the infections came just a short time before Trump departed for Oklahoma, and the president raged to aides that the information had been made public, according to two White House and campaign officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Activists flooded the city's downtown streets and briefly blocked traffic at an intersection, but police reported just one arrest as of Saturday afternoon. Many of them chanted and marched, and some occasionally got into shouting matches with Trump supporters who chanted, "all lives matter."