Heat, virus no deterrent for Trump fans camped outside Tulsa arena

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Trump picks Tulsa for return of signature campaign rallies

Despite more than 117,000 coronavirus deaths in the U.S. as of June 17, and stark warnings from health experts, Trump has reveled in the upcoming event.

Rick Frazier drove more than 750 miles from Ohio to Tulsa to be one of the first campers in line for President Donald Trump's first rally in months, undeterred by a days-long wait in searing heat, the growing risk of the coronavirus or a lukewarm reception from local officials.

The 64-year-old is among scores of supporters who have brought their vans, tents, campers and Trump flags to the parking lots and sidewalks outside the 19,000-seat BOK Center, and who say what matters most is being there to see the president take the stage on Saturday — and to be sure he knows they have his back.

“The big thing is to go in and support the president,” said Frazier, who arrived Tuesday for what will be his 21st Trump rally. Frazier said he feels safe, noting he and other campers are using hand sanitizer to prevent spread of COVID-19.

Trump rallies are known for being big events with a sometimes festival-like atmosphere, and have always drawn die-hard fans who sleep outside for days to secure a spot and pass time at a kind of political tailgate party. The groups gathering in Tulsa are taking that loyalty to a new level, though some called the coronavirus threat “an exaggeration.”

Temperatures in Tulsa have reached the 90s, and the Trump faithful are camped in an area with hardly a spot of shade. While Trump said Thursday he picked Oklahoma partly because “you’ve done so well with the COVID," the city has seen record numbers of new coronavirus cases this week, and Tulsa Health Department Director Bruce Dart has pushed for postponing the event.

Trump supporters camp out next to the BOK Center, site of President Donald Trump's first political rally since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, on June 18, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Trump said there had been “tremendous requests for tickets" and that there will be “a crowd like I guess nobody has seen before," creating the kind of packed, indoor space that scientists say heighten the virus' spread more than outdoors.

His rallies typically include a lot of shouting and chanting, and attendees often travel from long distances, prompting fears they could be infected and then spread it to people back home. In an attempt to protect itself from lawsuits, Trump’s campaign added language to the event registration stating guests assumed risk for expose to COVID-19.

But meeting with Trump at the White House Thursday, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt pledged the state is ready, noting its rate of positive COVID-19 tests is lower than many other states. As of this week, Tulsa County has displaced Oklahoma County as the state’s leading COVID-19 hotspot with 1,825 cases.

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“It’s going to be safe,” said Stitt, a Republican. “We have to learn how to be safe and how to move on.”

That has not reassured BOK Center management, who requested a written health and safety plan from the Trump campaign Thursday. In a statement to Oklahoma City television station KFOR, rally organizers appeared unimpressed but said they will review the request.

The Trump campaign said Thursday that it takes “safety seriously," noting that organizers are providing masks, hand sanitizers and doing temperature checks for all attendees.

“This will be a Trump rally, which means a big, boisterous, excited crowd," the campaign said. “We don’t recall the media shaming demonstrators about social distancing — in fact the media were cheering them on.“

Meanwhile, protesters have also begun gathering outside the Tulsa venue, where Trump had originally been scheduled to speak Friday. He changed the date amid an uproar that it would occur on Juneteenth, which marks the end of slavery in the U.S., and in a city where a 1921 white-on-black attack killed as many as 300 people. Black community leaders said they still worry Saturday's rally could spark violence.

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Trump has taken a hiatus from the rallies that have been a centerpiece of his campaign, halting them since March 2 because of the spreading virus, which has killed around 118,000 people in the U.S. But he has been eager to return to the events, which allow him to rally his base and build the campaign database of supporters. Saturday's rally also could provide a bit of diversion from criticism over Trump's handling of the pandemic and the protests following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Rainey Strader, 48, who traveled to Tulsa from Iowa with her husband and 75-year-old mother, said she brought a mask but isn't sure if she will wear it once she gets inside the venue. Strader said she isn't worried about COVID-19, which she considers to be “like the flu.”

“It’s just a new thing and everybody’s worried,” said Strader, who was working a word-search puzzle while she waited Thursday with her mother while her husband slept in their van. “It’s exaggerated.”

Strader's mother, Catherine Pahsetopah, also said she's not sure if she will wear her mask, despite being considered high-risk for COVID-19 because of her age and having health problems. She said she's seen presidents come and go — all the way “back to Eisenhower” — and Trump ranks among the best.

“He’s great. He’s wonderful," Pahsetopah said, adding that “If John Kennedy knew what happened to the Democratic Party he wouldn’t want them” because of their support for "aborting the babies.”

Delmer Phillips, 41, of Tulsa, described himself and others that showed up early for the rally as “front-row Joes” excited to get a glimpse of the president. He said he won’t wear a mask this weekend because he believes he may have already had the virus and has built up immunity.

“I’m personally not so worried about it,” he said. “I believe in God, and I don’t live in fear.“

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Burnett reported form Chicago and Murphy from Oklahoma City. Associated Press writers Aya Elamroussi in Bayonne, New Jersey, Jill Bleed in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Aamer Madhani in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.