Chicago Sun-Times

TRUMP SENDING FEDS?

Administra­tion hints Portland-style response may be planned for Chicago

- LYNN SWEET D.C. DECODER lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

President Donald Trump and his administra­tion hinted Sunday that federal agents may be deployed to Chicago as soon as this week to crack down on protests and gun violence in a military-style response similar to Portland, Oregon.

If Trump sends a Portland-style action to Chicago, it would represent a dramatic escalation between Trump and Mayor Lori Lightfoot regarding how to deal with the city’s ongoing battles against gun violence and demonstrat­ions against racial injustice and police brutality.

In a Sunday Twitter post, Trump said, “The Radical Left Democrats, who totally control Biden, will destroy our Country as we know it. Unimaginab­ly bad things would happen to America. Look at Portland, where the pols are just fine with 50 days of anarchy. We sent in help. Look at New York, Chicago, Philadelph­ia. NO!”

Oregon’s attorney general, Ellen Rosenblum, in a federal lawsuit filed Friday protesting heavy-handed tactics by federal law enforcemen­t agents, said they are “carrying out law enforcemen­t actions without wearing any identifyin­g informatio­n, even so much as the agency that employs them.”

Chicago is one of several liberal, Democratic-run cities targeted by Trump in coordinati­on with his reelection campaign to reinforce his message that he is for “law and order” while framing rival Joe Biden as soft on crime and anti-police.

Here are the latest developmen­ts:

† In the past days, Trump, in remarks and on Twitter, has been saying he will be taking unspecifie­d actions in Chicago and other cities whether local officials are asking for federal assistance. He has assailed Lightfoot and Gov. J.B. Pritzker for not calling him to ask for help, which the Democratic leaders did not do because they consider his outreach no more than a press stunt.

On Fox News Sunday, Trump was asked by host Chris Wallace about shooting deaths in New York and Chicago and how he explains what he is going to do.

Trump replied, “I explain it very simply by saying that they’re Democrat-run cities, they are liberally run. They are stupidly run.”

† White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, in an interview with Fox News anchor Maria Bartiromo, said he was working on plans for Chicago and other cities with Attorney General William Barr and Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf.

“And you will see something rolled out this week as we start to go in and make sure that the communitie­s, whether it’s Chicago, or Portland, or Milwaukee or someplace across the heartland of the country. We need to make sure that our communitie­s are safe,” Meadows said.

† This potential action by Trump comes in this context. Chicago has been grappling with gun violence and police misconduct for years; Trump has been slamming the city since his 2016 presidenti­al campaign. Lightfoot took office in May 2019.

But on Lightfoot’s watch, the problems continue and are made more difficult when protests in Chicago in May were ignited by the death of George Floyd, an African American killed by a white Minneapoli­s police officer.

Over the weekend, dozens of people were shot and seven killed. The White House keeps track of and highlights Chicago’s toll of violent deaths.

† Trump contemplat­es a move in Chicago as the issues of police brutality, gun violence and a revitalize­d civil justice movement are intersecti­ng before the presidenti­al election.

As part of the civil justice movement, protesters — or local officials — are taking down monuments of leaders associated with slavery or racism in the wake of Floyd’s death. In June, Trump signed an executive order he said could further protect monuments as he objects to taking down Confederat­e statues.

In Chicago’s Grant Park, protesters, trying to tear down the Christophe­r Columbus statue, clashed with police on Saturday night. A video showed a teen activist being punched in the mouth by a Chicago police officer.

This caught the attention of the Trump campaign Sunday. In a release, the campaign, noting 18 officers were injured, said Biden and Democrats want to give “criminals a free pass to destroy some of our nation’s greatest cities.”

Lightfoot is at odds with the Fraternal Order of Police Trump-friendly president, John Catanzara Jr. He posted a letter to Trump on Saturday on Facebook, asking for federal government “help” to fight “chaos” in Chicago.

In reaction to that, a group of city, state and Cook County elected officials on Sunday in a statement condemned Catanzara’s request for Trump’s interventi­on.

The group said, “This is a blatant attempt to instigate further violence against the young people who are leading the fight for real safety and justice in Chicago, and is particular­ly frightenin­g given the situation in Portland, where unidentifi­ed federal agents have been throwing protesters into unmarked vehicles.”

Roger Stone, a political operative whose 40-month prison sentence was commuted this month by President Donald Trump, his longtime friend, called a Los Angelesbas­ed Black radio host a “Negro” on the air during a contentiou­s interview.

The exchange occurred on Saturday’s Mo’Kelly Show, whose host — Morris O’Kelly — grilled Stone on his conviction for lying to Congress, tampering with witnesses and obstructin­g the House investigat­ion into whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election.

O’Kelly on his program’s website said “Stone could have reached for any pejorative, but unfortunat­ely went there.”

Stone’s attorney on Sunday said he was unaware of the broadcast and had no immediate comment.

As O’Kelly asserted that Stone’s commutatio­n was because of his friendship with Trump, Stone’s voice goes faint but can be heard uttering that he was “arguing with this Negro.”

O’Kelly then asks Stone to repeat the comment, but Stone goes momentaril­y silent.

In a statement, Stone defended himself by saying that anyone familiar with him “knows I despise racism!”

“Mr. O’Kelly needs a good peroxide cleaning of the wax in his ears because at no time did I call him a negro,” Stone said, using lowercase for the word. “That said, Mr. O’Kelly needs to spend a little more time studying black history and institutio­ns. The word negro is far from a slur.”

 ?? DAVE KILLEN/THE OREGONIAN VIA AP ?? Federal agents and police respond to protesters during a demonstrat­ion Friday in Portland, Oregon.
DAVE KILLEN/THE OREGONIAN VIA AP Federal agents and police respond to protesters during a demonstrat­ion Friday in Portland, Oregon.
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 ??  ?? Roger Stone
Roger Stone

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