The Daily Telegraph

The Right-wing groups behind the US anti-lockdown protests

- By in Washington

Nick Allen

AT AN anti-lockdown protest in Richmond, the capital of Virginia, last week, demonstrat­ors wielded signs saying “I’m essential” and “Let me work”.

The wording for those signs was not entirely spontaneou­s. It was suggested in a “planning guide” provided by Freedomwor­ks, a conservati­ve group based in Washington advocating for less government, and with links to the Tea Party.

It is just one of a number of organisati­ons in the background seeking to assist the wave of US demonstrat­ions. Others include pro-gun groups, antiaborti­on campaigner­s, donors and political operators, some with a direct link to Donald Trump.

Many internet domain names associated with the protests have been snapped up by such groups. Three progun activist brothers have registered some of them. “Reopen Mississipp­i”, belongs to a PR agency based just outside Washington, which has several former employees working in the Trump administra­tion.

It all raises the question of whether the protests are really a spontaneou­s outpouring of frustratio­n. Or are they what shadowy American political operatives call “astroturfi­ng” – inventing a seemingly grassroots movement to promote your agenda?

Are Republican puppet-masters in Washington, desperate to reopen the economy, really pulling the strings?

Not so, according to Noah Wall, vice president of Freedomwor­ks, which has a staff of 40 in the capital.

“Our role has been to support, rather than to organise,” Mr Wall told The Daily Telegraph. “We’re stuck here [in Washington] so we’re not actually on the ground. It is activist driven, activist led. However, we can act as a clearing house. Beginning last Monday we started to get calls from activists saying they wanted to protest, and could we assist. We’re absolutely interested in helping them. We’re working to make sure they do it in a responsibl­e way.”

Its planning guide for activists, marked “confidenti­al,” includes tips like bringing unemployme­nt slips to protests, targeting state capitol buildings and promoting events as much as possible on social media using the hashtag Reopenamer­ica.

Stephen Moore, its economic adviser, has just been appointed to Mr Trump’s task force for reopening the country. He was previously an adviser to Mr Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Another well-funded and well-connected group playing a support role is Convention of States, which seeks to limit the power of the federal government and balance the budget.

The group’s president Mark Meckler, who was a leading figure in the Tea Party, said the protests were what they appeared to be, a spontaneou­s and “organic” movement, and not some “vast Right-wing conspiracy”.

He said: “We are not organising protests, we are not facilitati­ng protests. We can’t tell people what to do even if we wanted to.”

 ??  ?? Protesters in Richmond, Virginia, last week
Protesters in Richmond, Virginia, last week

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