White nationalist rally sputters out
Thousands of counter-protesters travel to Washington
A white nationalist rally in the heart of Washington drew two dozen demonstrators and thousands of chanting counter-protesters on Sunday, the one-year anniversary of racially charged violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.
A large police presence kept the two sides separated in Lafayette Square, in front of the White House. After two hours and a few speeches, the “Unite the Right 2” rally ended early when it began to rain and two police vans took the demonstrators back to Virginia.
Sunday’s events, while tense at times, were a far cry from the street attacks that broke out in downtown Charlottesville a year ago, when a local woman was killed by a man who drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters.
“Unite the Right 2” had been denied a permit in Charlottesville this year, but did secure one for Washington. Organizers had planned for up to 400 protesters.
At the head of the white nationalist group was Virginia activist Jason Kessler, who helped organize last year’s event in Charlottesville.
He emerged with a handful of fellow demonstrators from a subway station holding an American flag and walked toward the White House ringed by police, while counter-protesters taunted the group and called them Nazis.
Dan Haught, a 54-year-old computer programmer from Washington, was attending his first protest at the White House with a sign that said “Back under your rocks you Nazi clowns.”
“We wanted to send a message to the world that we vastly outnumber them,” Haught said. Police made no arrests by day and would not give a crowd estimate. Later that evening, a small group of counter-protesters clashed with police in downtown Washington.
The violence last year in Charlottesville, sparked by white nationalist outrage over a plan to remove a Confederate general’s statue, sparked condemnation across the political spectrum.
President Donald Trump said at the time there were “very fine people” on both sides, spurring criticism he was equating counter-protesters with neo-Nazis and white supremacists.