Supporters of President Donald Trump cheer as he arrives to speak during a campaign rally at Arnold Palmer Regional Airport, Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020, in Latrobe, Pa.
Evan Vucci / AP Photo
Supporters of President Donald Trump cheer as he arrives to speak during a campaign rally at Arnold Palmer Regional Airport, Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020, in Latrobe, Pa.
Evan Vucci / AP Photo
(Harrisburg) — A day before a rally in Pennsylvania, Gov. Tom Wolf on Friday accused President Donald Trump of blatantly disregarding social distancing and mask requirements during his frequent campaign rallies in the battleground state, calling it dangerous and disappointing.
Wolf, a Democrat, criticized Trump in a strongly worded statement and asked the Republican president to ensure Saturday’s rally abides by guidance designed to stem the spread of the coronavirus.
While Wolf’s mask order still stands, a federal judge last week ruled that Wolf’s pandemic restrictions, including size limits on gatherings of people, are unconstitutional. Wolf is appealing it. Those limitations had been 250 people outdoors and 25 people indoors.
Still, Wolf said two of the president’s rallies this month in Pennsylvania violated the state’s public health guidance. One was before the judge’s ruling, and one at Pittsburgh International Airport came after it.
In comments to reporters Friday, Pennsylvania’s Democratic Party chairwoman, Nancy Patton Mills, criticized Trump as preparing to hold another “super-spreader rally.”
Wolf has said that earlier efforts to contact the White House about the matter have gone unanswered.
“Once again, I am requesting that the President of the United States not endanger Pennsylvanians by holding unsafe rallies that will put Pennsylvania communities at risk,” Wolf said.
Saturday’s rally is scheduled for a hangar at Harrisburg International Airport in Dauphin County.
A Trump campaign spokesperson said Friday that everyone attending will get a temperature check before admission, be provided a mask they are encouraged to wear and have access to hand sanitizer. The spokesperson did not respond to questions about how many people were expected at Saturday’s rally.
Pennsylvania’s seven-day average of the percentage of positive coronavirus tests, new cases and coronavirus-related deaths have all risen in September over August, according to the COVID Tracking Project, but they remain well below spikes seen in the spring.
Asked earlier in the week if health officials could track an outbreak to Trump’s Sept. 3 rally in Latrobe, Wolf said it was too soon to tell.
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