- Trump said last year it was the huge mistake to hold a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a new book says.
- He initially said more than 1 million people had requested tickets and tens of thousands would come.
- Fewer than 6,500 showed, which led Trump to yell at and demote his campaign manager, the book says.
President
About half the stadium was empty, and Trump "erupted" at his campaign manager, Brad Parscale, afterward, according to "Peril," written by The Washington Post's
"Biggest fucking mistake," the president is quoted as saying at an Oval Office meeting after the June 2020 rally in Tulsa. "I shouldn't have ever done that fucking, fucking rally."
He also called Parscale a "fucking moron," the book says. Trump fired Parscale as his campaign manager less than a month later.
A few days before the Tulsa rally, Trump said nearly 1 million people had requested tickets. He also told Woodward the day before the rally that "over 1.2 million have signed up" and that he was expecting tens of thousands to show up. "But think of that," he told Woodward. "Nobody ever had rallies like that."
In the end, turnout was far smaller at the rally. It drew 6,200 people at a stadium that has a 19,000-seat capacity. Trump was faced with rows of empty seats, and the president had to nix plans to speak outside the venue, where the campaign initially anticipated hosting throngs of supporters who couldn't get into the stadium because it was expected to be packed.
After the rally, a wave of K-pop fans and other social-media users claimed responsibility for the lack of showing, saying they reserved thousands of tickets for the event with no plans to attend.
A 51-year-old Iowa woman appeared to have played a significant role in the spoof gaining steam, as she posted a video explaining how to register for the rally that racked up more than 725,000 likes.
Trump attracted heavy scrutiny for holding the event in the first place, given that COVID-19 cases in the city were on the rise and public-health experts were urging Americans not to gather in large crowds and to follow social-distancing recommendations. Medical professionals also said the rally could become a superspreader event.
Cases spiked in and around Tulsa after the rally, which led the city-county health department director to conclude the arena crowd and protests outside "likely contributed" to the outbreak. The former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, who spoke at the Trump rally, died of COVID-19 less than two weeks after the event.
The rally also fell on Juneteenth in 2020, drawing intense backlash from the Black community in Tulsa and Black Lives Matter supporters nationwide, who pointed out that the rally also took place near the 99th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre on Black Wall Street.