Trump Tulsa rally scheduled for Juneteenth pushed back a day

Donald Trump.
(Image credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

President Trump on Friday evening tweeted he is rescheduling a rally that was set to take place in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 19. Juneteenth, the commemoration of the end of slavery in the United States, falls on that day, and the president said many of his African-American "friends and supporters" suggested changing the date "out of respect for this holiday."

Trump had received criticism for scheduling the rally on Juneteenth, but it wasn't just the date people found objectionable. In 1921, an armed white mob looted and burned an affluent, predominantly black neighborhood in Tulsa, killing hundreds of people. Trump's critics said the decision to hold a rally there "is disrespectful to the lives and community" that were lost, especially at a time when Americans are protesting racial injustice nationwide. The president hasn't addressed the location. Read more at NBC News and CNN.

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Tim O'Donnell

Tim is a staff writer at The Week and has contributed to Bedford and Bowery and The New York Transatlantic. He is a graduate of Occidental College and NYU's journalism school. Tim enjoys writing about baseball, Europe, and extinct megafauna. He lives in New York City.