TikTok App users say they helped Sabotage Donald Trump Rally
A report on TikTok App users say they helped Sabotage Donald Trump Rally by Reuters on Youtube.
TikTok users and lovers of Korean pop music have taken limited credit for increasing the number of attendees at a full-scale rally at the first two-month US President Donald Trump meeting held in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Users of social media on various platforms, including the popular video sharing app TikTok, said in the post and video on Sunday they had completed online registration of the event with a view to attending.
Donald Trump American President Picture Picture Credit: Gadget NDTV |
However, the 19,000-seat BOK Center forums had plenty of empty seats and Trump and Deputy President Mike Pence canceled talks to a crowd that was "not working".
Proponents of the Trump campaign saw the movement as a way to revive its base and show support, at a time when lists of public opinion polls suggested that it was replacing its Democratic opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden.
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Oklahoma has reported the rise of new coronavirus cases in recent days, and the state health department has warned those planning to attend the event that they face a serious risk of contracting the virus.
The Trump campaign said the entry was "for the first time - for the first time - and" no one was given a real ticket.
The campaign team blamed the disappointing crowd at the protest rally for creating an unfriendly atmosphere and preventing supporters from entering the stadium.
Senior Trump aide Mercedes Schlapp's campaign told Fox News on Sunday that attendees could not enter the BOK center.
Schlapp went on to say that there were families who "did not want to bring in - could not bring - their children because of protesters' concerns".
There was a round of applause and an event outside the event among about 30 Black Lives Matter demonstrators and other Trump supporters waiting to enter.
But reporters on the ground say they haven't seen any problems with people trying to get into them.
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat, responded to Parscale's criticism of the media for disappointing attendees and also showing misconduct by outside ministers.
Trump had largely dismissed criticism for his decision to hold a rally in Tulsa, the site of the largest racist violence against black Americans in the last 100 years.
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