Houston Chronicle

Kenosha rebounds, is set for vote after racial unrest that left 2 dead

- By Tim Sullivan

KENOSHA, Wis. — Early voters waiting in line at Kenosha’s municipal offices couldn’t miss the dozens of buildings still boarded up in this little lakefront city. They might have passed the post office with its covered windows, the plywood-fortified dinosaur museum or the barricaded jeweler, yoga studio or grocery store.

Many of these businesses are open, but they are also hedging their bets, covering up windows and sometimes building outer sets of plywood doors that can be easily shut, like castles pulling up their drawbridge­s, if trouble returns. With a divisive election just a day away, it’s no surprise they’re being careful.

Yet two months after street violence shook Kenosha, far more businesses have taken their plywood down. The music store is selling ukuleles again. Neighborho­od taverns are serving cheap beer and good company. People are walking along the Lake Michigan waterfront, even if the winds are increasing­ly bitter.

Kenosha has been battered, but it’s certainly not defeated.

“This city is a lot stronger than people give it credit for,“said Anthony Kennedy, an African American alderman.

Greg Guthrie emerged from the municipal offices late last week and said he doubted the violence had shifted the political ground very much.

“I don’t think it’s changed anyone’s vote,” the 51-year-old mechanical engineer said. “But I think it’s probably increased the turnout.”

“It’s galvanized both sides” of the political divide, which he believes has only grown wider.

What happened in Kenosha and in other American cities during a summer of protests could be critical to the outcome of Tuesday’s presidenti­al election in Wisconsin and other battlegrou­nd states.

For President Donald Trump and his law-and-order campaign, protests that skidded into violence show that only he can keep such unrest from spreading.

But for African Americans, racial minorities and many Democrats, the killings of Black people by police officers, which set off most of the demonstrat­ions, show that America is in desperate need of change.

The trouble in Kenosha began on Aug. 23, when a police officer, responding to a call about a domestic dispute, was seen on video shooting Jacob Blake repeatedly in the back at close range. Blake, a Black man, was left paralyzed from the waist down.

The shooting set off waves of protests , some of which turned destructiv­e. Buildings and cars were set on fire and stores looted.

The violence spiked on Aug. 25, when two protesters were shot and killed and another was injured. Kyle Rittenhous­e, a white 17-year-old who came to Kenosha that day with a semiautoma­tic rifle, is charged in the shootings.

Rittenhous­e’s lawyers have called him a patriot acting in self-defense while defending the streets of Kenosha. If convicted, the teenager, who is from just across the state line in Antioch, Ill., could spend the rest of his life in prison.

He was among a number of armed white men who came to Kenosha, saying they wanted to protect property during the unrest.

“As awful as the property damagewas, and it was awful, it’s not as bad as taking lives,” said Kennedy, whose district includes the street where Blake was shot. “It wasn’t the left (who killed people). It wasn’t antifa. It was a white boy from Antioch who came to our town and killed two people.”

The August shootings have spurred political involvemen­t in Kenosha, with the formation of activist groups and thousands of people signing up to vote.

“People are asking some very hard questions and demanding answers,” he said.

“The amount of voter apathy in our town is shocking,” Kennedy said. “But in September we had 4,000 new voter registrati­ons” in surroundin­g Kenosha County, which has some 95,000 registered voters.

 ?? Wong Maye-E / Associated Press ?? Burned vehicles mark the unrest that began in Kenosha, Wis., after police shot a Black man on Aug. 23.
Wong Maye-E / Associated Press Burned vehicles mark the unrest that began in Kenosha, Wis., after police shot a Black man on Aug. 23.

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