With federal agents off the streets, Portland protesters refocus
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| Portland, Ore.
With federal agents, tear gas, and other crowd-control munitions notably absent from around Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse in downtown Portland, protesters here are celebrating what they hope is the end of a distracting standoff over the federal use of force.
Several successive nights of peaceful demonstrations drawing thousands of people signal a welcome turning point in the Portland movement and an opportunity to refocus on issues of racial justice and police reform, they say 鈥 relieved, but also motivated, by the agents鈥 pullback.
鈥淭he focus was taken away from the real thing, which is supposed to be Black Lives Matter,鈥 says Carolyn Welty-Fick, a fifth-grade teacher from Hood River, Oregon, holding a large sign saying 鈥淩ESIST鈥 in bold letters under a black fist, as people all around her chant 鈥淏lack lives!鈥 The contrast on Saturday night was striking, she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great. It鈥檚 a lot more peaceful. Last week there was a lot more tension in the air,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e were in full combat gear聽鈥 helmets and that sort of thing, there was gas coming.鈥
Why We Wrote This
The deployment of federal agents pushed Portland鈥檚 protests into the spotlight, marking a new chapter in the national conversation around race and policing 鈥 and the limits of the federal power. Now that agents are pulling back, what happens to demonstrators鈥 original goals?
At the same time, protesters say the aggressive tactics of federal agents without insignia, who injured some people with crowd-control munitions and dragged protesters into unmarked cars, generated widespread outrage and a media spotlight that has energized support for their movement.
鈥淚t got people more angry,鈥 says Matt Robbins, a Portland security officer who acts as a medic during the protests. Demonstrations were 鈥渄ying down,鈥 with just 300 or 400 people a night, but 鈥渁s soon as the Feds came it was a few thousand. Last weekend we had 11,000 people.鈥
Furthermore, protesters can now claim the withdrawal of those agents from the Hatfield courthouse as a tangible victory 鈥 and a sign that their activism can produce concrete change.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a small victory,鈥 says Mike, an organizer dressed in black clothes and boots, who like many protesters declined to give his last name to protect his privacy. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 proof this works. That鈥檚 proof that being out here and occupying space and showing them 鈥榳e are not afraid of your police brutality鈥 鈥 and we will fight until we get change聽鈥 works.鈥
Summer of protest
As Portland鈥檚 demonstrations enter their 10th week, protesters say they will continue to press forward. Protests against police brutality erupted in Portland May 29 as unrest swept many U.S. cities after Minneapolis police killed George Floyd.聽That night, a peaceful vigil by thousands later devolved into what police declared a riot, as some protesters broke windows of a jail and set fires inside. Early that morning, Mayor Ted Wheeler declared a state of emergency.
The following weeks saw a mix of large, peaceful marches and unrest targeting government buildings, with Portland police firing tear gas and other munitions and protesters hurling rocks, bottles, and commercial grade fireworks and setting fires, injuring officers, according to the police.
鈥淎s a Black man and a public servant, I have a unique perspective,鈥 Chuck Lovell, chief of the Portland Police Bureau, wrote in an Aug. 3 , stressing he is committed to leading police reforms. 鈥淭his violence is doing nothing to further the Black Lives Matter movement.鈥澛
Throughout the protests, some demonstrators have also voiced concern and disagreement over the movement鈥檚 tactics, and argued that the original focus on racism and policing have been overshadowed.
Violence escalated sharply聽after the Trump administration deployed tactical teams of federal agents to Portland in early July in order to protect federal property from damage by protesters. But there has been little violence since Oregon officials negotiated a phased withdrawal of the federal teams beginning last week. Portland police are investigating the stabbing of a victim on Monday, reportedly a female protester attacked in Lownsdale Square.
While waning in other urban areas, the protests have been sustained in Portland聽鈥 a city of 655,000 that is more than 70% white聽鈥 fueled by activists with eclectic viewpoints and tactics, but united around the core goals of ending racism and promoting more humane policing.
鈥淜illing Black Americans for no reason has got to stop,鈥 says David Anthony, an iron worker at Western Group, who quit his union job to take part in the Portland protests from Day 1.
Raising awareness among the general population is the first step toward ultimately ending U.S. police brutality, he says, which leads not only to deaths, but to 鈥渟uppressing Black people, and silencing them.鈥
Toward that end, Mr. Anthony now spends all day barbecuing donated food to feed the Portland movement. 鈥淩ight now, it鈥檚 about people being aware of what鈥檚 going on,鈥 he says, as he hands out free chicken wings to hungry demonstrators at a corner stand with a huge Black Lives Matter sign. 鈥淲e just barbecue with love and send that out,鈥 he says, welcoming Saturday鈥檚 more relaxed atmosphere. 鈥淜eeping people fed is ground zero to keeping people calmer.鈥
Indeed, with the chaos receded, Saturday鈥檚 peaceful protest drew a large, racially diverse crowd of locals and out-of-towners, young and old, veterans, blue-collar workers, teachers, artists, mothers, and families 鈥 with some school-aged children leading chants. They also included self-identified anti-fascists clad in black and people of many political persuasions, ranging from communists to mainstream Democrats. In addition to demanding an end to systemic racism, they called to shift funds from the Portland Police Bureau to community services, transferring some police work to social workers and mental health care providers.
Many stories, one protest
Still, the protesters who gather nightly across from the courthouse in Portland鈥檚 shady Lownsdale Square are loosely organized at best. Activists who occupied a section of Seattle鈥檚 Capitol Hill neighborhood called the CHOP in June have recently fanned out to Portland and other cities to offer help.
鈥淭hey helped us organize a medical supply tent, a propaganda supply tent, and 鈥 are helping us get started with a council and assembly,鈥 says Jared, a software developer and Portland protest leader, leaning against a tree trunk with his guitar. 鈥淢ost of the organization has come from Seattle, and the street fighting has come from Portland,鈥 he says.
Mike, an anti-fascist organizer who arrived in Portland from Seattle six weeks ago, says he helps provide security and 鈥渋ntelligence鈥 to the protesters by monitoring police scanners, flight logs, and license plates, as well as right-wing groups such as the Proud Boys, Three Percenters, and others who have shown up during protests.
Yet mainly the protests are made up of disparate individuals contributing as they see fit to a common cause.
Near the courthouse, Quan Walters, an illustrator with the Portland Street Art Alliance, paints a huge mural of the cartoon character Huey with a raised fist symbolizing empowerment. Mr. Walters says his art is 鈥渁 testament to where we are in history and where we want to go.鈥 He has joined street marches, but prefers to protest through art. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like chess pieces,鈥 he says. 鈥淓veryone has their own position on the game board, and mine happens to be art and imagery.鈥
Vietnam-era veterans have formed 鈥渨alls鈥 in solidarity with the protesters, while urging the police and federal agents, generally much younger, to reject orders to use force. 鈥淚 stepped forward to tell them why I was here,鈥 says Mike Hastie, a member of Veterans for Peace who served with an Army cavalry unit in the Central Highlands of Vietnam. But as he spoke passionately of Vietnam atrocities to a line of federal agents outside the Portland courthouse in late July, one of them pepper-sprayed him in the face, an incident captured on a video that went viral.
鈥淚f we end the militarization [of police], we can have a dialogue,鈥 says another Army veteran, Maurice Martin. 鈥淧olice dogs, overwhelming force, tear gas聽鈥 they don鈥檛 even use that in the real fighting,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e 鈥 sure should not use it in the streets on unarmed civilians.鈥
One sign the protests will continue is that they bring together newly energized protesters and those for whom racism has been a life-long struggle. Ms. Welty-Fick, the teacher, says she recently took a class on white privilege at her church, and realized she had been a passive 鈥渘on-racist,鈥 rather than actively 鈥渁nti-racist,鈥 and needed to speak out for people of color.
Haseena, a recent college graduate who sells Black Lives Matter T-shirts at the protests, says she is gratified to see so many people advocating for Black lives. 鈥淪ince I was young, I have seen Black people die and be killed over nothing,鈥 she says. 鈥淐hange is way over past due.鈥