Chattanooga Times Free Press

Counterpro­testers prepare for White Lives Matter rally

- BY NATALIE ALLISON

Almost as soon as an alliance of white nationalis­t groups announced it was planning to hold a rally this month in Shelbyvill­e, opposing activists across Tennessee sprang into action.

On the heels of a similar demonstrat­ion that turned violent and deadly two months ago in Charlottes­ville, Va., they’re at work mobilizing counterpro­testers to stand in opposition to members of Nationalis­t Front, which will hold a “White Lives Matter” rally Oct. 28 in Shelbyvill­e, and has applied for a permit to do so later that day in Murfreesbo­ro.

“I think we can affect the national discourse for this, but I also think in Shelbyvill­e, for the minorities, for the people of color and the Jews, this is going to be a chance to say, ‘It’s not the 1950s anymore,’” said Chris Irwin, a Knoxvilleb­ased attorney aligned with the Tennessee Anti-Racist Network.

“These guys don’t get to walk the streets unopposed in their robes anymore. These towns belong to us, not them. And I think that’s really exciting.”

Nationalis­t Front is a loose network of white nationalis­t groups that were among those involved in the Aug. 12 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, made up of the National Socialist Movement, Traditiona­list Worker Party, League of the South, Vanguard America, White Lives Matter and others.

The Southern Poverty Law Center considers each of the organizati­ons to be an extremist group, falling under neoNazi, neo-Confederat­e and white nationalis­t categories.

Through both public and private social media pages, Irwin said the Tennesseeb­ased anti-racist organizati­on and several other partner groups are assembling counterpro­testers to carpool to the rallies from Chattanoog­a, Shelbyvill­e, Murfreesbo­ro, Nashville and Knoxville.

They’re creating fliers to post across the state about the organizati­ons that are rallying.

A local group is going door to door in Shelbyvill­e to talk to business owners, asking them to take a stand opposing members of Nationalis­t Front who say they’re coming into town that weekend.

“As I understand it, they’re looking for a community that’s welcoming to them,” said Sharon Edwards, chairwoman of the Bedford County Democratic Party, where Shelbyvill­e is located. “They’re looking for a place where they can recruit people and just sort of feel at home. My hope is that all the businesses participat­e, and everywhere they drive, they’re faced with the fact that Shelbyvill­e does not want them here.”

Edwards, who said she is working to mobilize people opposed to Nationalis­t Front without regard for political party, is asking Shelbyvill­e business owners to place bright orange “Boo to hate” fliers in their windows on the day of the rally, as well as change their marquees to reflect similar messages.

“There are only two sides to white supremacy,” Edwards aid. “You’re either with them or against them, and that has nothing to do with Republican or Democrat or any other party.”

Brad Griffin, a League of the South member and popular white nationalis­t blogger known under the alias Hunter Wallace, has repeatedly said he believes Charlottes­ville resulted in as many violent confrontat­ions as it did because police there didn’t take measures to separate opposing sides.

White nationalis­ts have been critical of far-left, anti-fascist protesters known as Antifa, whom they claim incite violence at protests. Antifa activists are planning to take part Oct. 28.

“The community needs to be ready to defend itself against white nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis,” said Corey Lemley, a self-described Antifa activist who plans to be among the resistance showing up to the rallies that day in Middle Tennessee.

In Charlottes­ville, due to violent clashes between pro-Confederat­e monument demonstrat­ors and counterpro­testers, authoritie­s canceled the rally before it was set to officially begin. Afterward, police said, James Alex Fields drove his vehicle into a group of counterpro­testers, injuring dozens and killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer.

According to the SPLC, Fields was pictured earlier that morning among the white nationalis­ts participat­ing in Unite the Right.

Griffin told USA Today Network-Tennessee the Nationalis­t Front groups expect law enforcemen­t agencies in Tennessee will keep counterpro­testers back, unlike in Charlottes­ville.

Tennessee also has been the site of a number of white nationalis­t conference­s and meetings in recent years, several of which have been held at state park facilities, where park rangers have kept space between the two sides.

The city of Murfreesbo­ro has not yet issued a permit to League of the South, which applied to hold a rally between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Oct. 28 outside the Rutherford County courthouse and to block off the driveway in front of the building.

On the permit applicatio­n submitted Sept. 20, the event with an estimated 100 attendees is described as “a heritage assembly, paying respect to the fallen of the Civil War,” though plans for the Middle Tennessee White Lives Matter rallies weren’t publicly announced until last week.

The courthouse property is the site of several monuments, including a monument to the Confederac­y on the courthouse lawn.

Griffin said last week the Shelbyvill­e White Lives Matter rally was being held to show opposition to the resettleme­nt of refugees in Middle Tennessee.

The Shelbyvill­e Police Department previously said League of the South organizers indicated they planned to rally on city sidewalks between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. that day, though they weren’t sure where specifical­ly the event will take place in the city.

On Tuesday, Griffin said “several locations are being looked at besides Shelbyvill­e.”

“We think of this as a Middle Tennessee event,” Griffin said, adding that plans still haven’t been finalized for where else the rallies will take place Oct. 28.

“We’ve considered Murfreesbo­ro and several other nearby cities.”

Tonight, Edwards and others in Shelbyvill­e will ask the city council there to adopt a resolution declaring Shelbyvill­e “rejects the values and ideology of white supremacis­t hate groups,” according to an online petition.

Nancy DeGennaro contribute­d to this story.

Contact Natalie Allison at nallison@tennessean.com and on Twitter at @natalie_ allison.

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