President Donald Trump is prepare to resume his campaign rallies next week — but attendees have to agree not to agree his campaign liable if they get the coronavirus in the xix,000-seat arena.

An invitation for the June 19 event in Tulsa, Oklahoma asks people to register online for the event —and waive their rights to sue if they get sick.

"By clicking register below, y'all are acknowledging that an inherent take a chance of exposure to COVID-xix exists in whatsoever public place where people are present. By attending the Rally, you and any guests voluntarily presume all risks related to exposure to COVID-19 and agree not to hold Donald J. Trump for President, Inc.," the rally site or organizers "liable for whatever illness or injury," the grade says.

The rally is being held in the Bank of Oklahoma Heart and comes as the city is in phase iii of reopening from the coronavirus pandemic.

"Under Stage 3, businesses may resume unrestricted staffing at their worksites by observing proper CDC-recommended social distancing protocols and are recommended to continue increased cleaning and disinfecting practices," Gov. Kevin Stitt's office said in a May 29th statement.

A Trump campaign official said there would be health precautions in place at the event but did not elaborate. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told reporters on Wednesday she didn't have specific information but said "we volition ensure that everyone who goes is safe."

Stitt, a Republican, has hailed the Trump effect. "The President is making Oklahoma his beginning campaign stop since March 2, and his visit hither confirms Oklahoma is the national example in responsibly and safely reopening," he said Wednesday.

The event had already been controversial because of the site and the date. Tulsa is the site of the Greenwood massacre, where a white mob killed an estimated 300 black people and torched the neighborhood's "Blackness Wall Street" in 1921, and the 19th is likewise known every bit Juneteenth, a holiday that marks the stop of slavery in the United States.