President Donald Trump is back on the campaign trail for the first time since his COVID-19 diagnosis.
The president will be in North Carolina on Thursday for a Make America Great Again rally in Greenville. The rally is set to happen at 1 p.m. at the Pitt-Greenville Airport.
On Monday, Trump held a rally in Florida.
The president tweeted Sunday morning that he was "immune" to the virus. Twitter then flagged the tweet because it "violated the Twitter Rules about spreading misleading and potentially harmful information related to COVID-19."
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State Democratic Party Chair Wayne Goodwin released a statement Sunday night about the president's planned visit:
North Carolinians will hear all the usual refrains from Donald Trump. Hateful, divisive rhetoric with plenty of falsehoods mixed in. What we won’t hear is a plan to make sure people who get sick during this pandemic can afford to see a doctor or a plan to protect the nearly 5 million people in our state living with a pre-existing condition.
President Trump was in Greenville for a rally last summer. That event became controversial when his comments about Rep. Ilhan Omar prompted supporters to chant "send her back," implying she should be deported to her native country of Somalia. Mayor P.J. Connelly said he was, "extremely disappointed and disheartened by the chant."
President Trump was scheduled to debate his Democratic challenger Joe Biden Thursday night, but the Trump campaign said it was withdrawing from the event after organizers said it would be held virtually because of concerns about COVID-19. Biden says he plans to hold a televised town hall that night.
This will be the sixth time president Trump has visited North Carolina in recent months.