How Portland protests became a campaign stage for Trump
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| Washington
Nightly images of mayhem out of Portland, Oregon, gave way to hope Wednesday after federal and state officials announced a conditional withdrawal of federal forces from the embattled northwestern city.听
But by Thursday, the promise of a quick end to the stalemate seemed to unravel, following another night of between protesters and federal officers.听And with each passing day, as the Nov. 3 elections approach, the politics grow more fraught.
The federal law enforcement effort in Portland is centered on protecting the federal courthouse there. But amid a pandemic and an economy in deep distress, President Donald Trump鈥檚 reelection prospects have been thrown into serious doubt 鈥 and some observers have suggested that the federal intervention is also, at least in part, a bid to deflect attention from the larger, national crises.
Why We Wrote This
In politics, the reasoning behind decisions is rarely straightforward. Portland has been ground zero for a battle of perspectives, from the need for 鈥渓aw and order鈥 to signs of election-year calculations at work.
President Trump is presenting himself as a 鈥渓aw and order president,鈥 an echo of Richard Nixon鈥檚 successful presidential campaign in 1968. But there鈥檚 a big difference: Mr. Nixon wasn鈥檛 the incumbent. Mr. Trump is 鈥 and fairly or not, he risks blame for some of the upheaval.
Democrats and their presidential candidate, Joe Biden, still run the risk of a backlash, to the extent that those on the side of the protesters are associated with destruction and violence. Some Black activists have that the original focus of the protests 鈥 demands for police reform and racial justice after the May 25 killing of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis 鈥 is being obscured.
For now, however, observers say the scale of the upheaval in Portland isn鈥檛 big enough to hurt Democrats or help Mr. Trump much, at a time when the coronavirus remains the overwhelming issue for the country.
鈥淭his is not 1968, where the violence and the demonstrations were the story, not a sideshow,鈥 says William Galston, a top domestic policy aide in the Clinton White House. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not the story this year.鈥
A political distraction?
Even when the focus is on Portland, the issue favors Democrats. So far, suburban voters, who could swing the presidential race, are not giving Mr. Trump high marks for the Portland deployment.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 necessarily see [the Portland clashes] helping him,鈥 says Karlyn Bowman, an expert on polling at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.听
A new Morning Consult/Politico survey found that some 47% of suburbanites said they disapproved of the staging of Department of Homeland Security officers in Portland, versus 42% who said they approved, .听In addition, 49% of suburbanites said the federal presence in Portland had done more to increase unrest rather than quell it.听
Analysts note that American suburbs have become increasingly diverse, making it more difficult for politicians seeking suburban votes to use race as a wedge issue.
鈥淸Mr. Trump鈥檚] trying to distract from the central failure on coronavirus,鈥 says Democratic strategist Jared Leopold. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a persuasive argument for the suburbs.鈥澨
And polls show voters trust Mr. Biden to do a better job on race relations than Mr. Trump by a wide margin 鈥 21 points, according to a recent听.听
Still, the violence in Portland is not without risks for Democrats and Mr. Biden. The former vice president has already rejected the left鈥檚 rallying cry of 鈥渄efund the police.鈥 And in remarks in early June, he distinguished between 鈥渓egitimate peaceful protest鈥 and 鈥渙pportunistic violent destruction.鈥
But he probably needs to speak up again, says Mr. Galston.听鈥淪omeone who鈥檚 been in politics as long as he has knows that saying something once is not enough.鈥澨
As of today, polls show Mr. Trump in serious danger of losing the election, and if he鈥檚 going to use Portland to his advantage, he needs to get the messaging just right, says Scott Jennings, a former political adviser to President George W. Bush.听
鈥淭he public wants [Mr. Trump] to respect the need for some kind of police reform, but I don鈥檛 think they approve of anarchists hijacking the situation,鈥 Mr. Jennings says.听
The public sees the president responding to the lawlessness but isn鈥檛 aware of his efforts on police reform, he adds.听听
Trump defenders point to two such efforts: On June 16, Mr. Trump issued an aimed at incentivizing police reforms. He also backed reform legislation in the Senate 鈥 led by the only Black Republican in that chamber, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina 鈥 which the Democrats 听
The Democrats, who control the House, passed their own bill, which won鈥檛 go anywhere in the Republican-controlled Senate. Thus the matter is deadlocked 鈥 the typical fate of most election-year legislation.听
But on the ground in Portland, there鈥檚 no waiting, as the nightly rhythm of protests, police action, and violence has continued.听
Especially with the pandemic, in which many Americans鈥 lives and livelihoods are at stake across the country, protecting public safety has to be paramount, say Trump defenders. To small business owners whose establishments have been threatened or damaged, protection by law enforcement is key.
鈥淧olitics should not have anything to do with saving lives,鈥 says Bruce LeVell, a Black business owner in Atlanta and executive director of the National Diversity Coalition for Trump. 鈥淣o sitting mayor, Republican or Democrat, should ever deny any law enforcement assistance to people in need.鈥澨
Differing interpretations
But the multitiered law enforcement dynamic in Portland is especially fraught. After federal, state, and local officials all announced that federal agents would begin leaving Portland, it soon became clear they had differing interpretations of when the federal forces鈥 departure would take place.听
Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf said that the federal law enforcement presence would remain 鈥渦ntil we are assured that the courthouse and other federal facilities will no longer be attacked nightly.鈥澨
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, said the federal withdrawal would begin Thursday, and that state police would take over protection of the federal courthouse in Portland.听
Portland Mayor Tom Wheeler, a Democrat, told reporters on a conference call that he welcomed the agreement for 鈥渢he imminent withdrawal鈥 of federal agents, but vowed to 鈥渃ontinue to fight this occupation until these forces are gone from every city.鈥
On that call, organized by the U.S. Conference of Mayors, other mayors reinforced Mayor Wheeler鈥檚 message, that the deployments of federal officers were not just unwelcome but also harmful, unconstitutional, and a political ploy.听
Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said the arrival of federal agents in Portland as well as Seattle had produced spillover unrest and an escalation of violence in her city. She confirmed that the agents have since withdrawn from Seattle after pressure from local and state authorities. And she raised a concern echoed by some Democrats: that the federal deployments seem 鈥渧ery much like 鈥 a dry run for martial law.鈥澨
Mr. Trump himself raised the specter of extraordinary measures to address the challenge of holding an election amid a pandemic. 鈥淒elay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???鈥 he suggested in a Thursday.
Republican lawmakers, however, were quick to dismiss the prospect. 鈥淣ever in the history of federal elections have we ever not held an election, and we should go forward with our election,鈥 House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told reporters.
The politics that seem to lurk at every turn in this season of unrest are hard to avoid. On Thursday, the Department of Justice that another federal law enforcement initiative in American cities, Operation Legend, would expand to include Cleveland, Detroit, and Milwaukee. Operation Legend is billed as an effort to help state and local law enforcement fight violent crime, and is different from the deployment in Portland, which aims to protect federal property.听
All three cities are located in battleground states 鈥 Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin.听
Staff writer Ann Scott Tyson contributed to this report from Seattle.听