Los Angeles Times

TAKING MESSAGE TO THE STREET

Project, which follows mayor’s clashes with Trump, shows support for the Black Lives Matter movement.

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The words “Black Lives Matter” are painted on 16th Street leading to the White House on Friday. The Washington project follows district Mayor Muriel Bowser’s clashes with President Trump.

WASHINGTON — City workers and volunteers painted the words Black Lives Matter in enormous bright yellow letters on the street leading to the White House, a highly visible sign of the District of Columbia’s embrace of a protest movement that has put it at odds with President Trump.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser tweeted aerial video of the painted message shortly after it was completed Friday. The letters and an image of the city’s flag stretch across 16th Street for two blocks, ending just before the church where Trump staged a photo op after federal officers forcibly cleared a peaceful demonstrat­ion in Lafayette Square to make way for the president and his entourage.

“The section of 16th street in front of the White House is now officially ‘Black Lives Matter Plaza,’ ” Bowser tweeted. A sign was put up to mark the change.

The street-painting project follows Bowser’s verbal clashes with the Trump administra­tion over the response to protests of the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Bowser has complained about the heavy-handed federal response and called for the removal of out-of-state National Guard troops. She says their difference­s highlight the need for D.C. to be a state and have more control over its internal affairs.

While not addressing the painted words, Trump continued his attacks on Bowser in tweets Friday.

“The incompeten­t Mayor of Washington, D.C., @MayorBowse­r, who’s budget is totally out of control and is constantly coming back to us for ‘handouts,’ is now fighting with the National Guard, who saved her from great embarrassm­ent over the last number of nights,” he tweeted. “If she doesn’t treat these men and women well, then we’ll bring in a different group of men and women!”

The local chapter of Black Lives Matter said it did not support painting the street and took a swipe at Bowser. “This is performati­ve and a distractio­n from her active counter organizing to our demands to decrease the police budget and invest in the community,” it said on Twitter.

On Thursday, as the protests turned peaceful, Bowser ended a curfew imposed after people broke into businesses over the weekend and Monday. A large rally is expected in the city on Saturday.

The mayor tweeted a letter from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), who wrote the president to express alarm that protesters were being confronted by armed federal agents and officers, many of them with their identities and agencies obscured.

 ?? Tasos Katopodis Getty Images ??
Tasos Katopodis Getty Images
 ?? Tasos Katopodis Getty Images ?? PEOPLE walk over a Black Lives Matter marking on 16th Street near the White House, where a peaceful rally this week was forcibly cleared by federal officers.
Tasos Katopodis Getty Images PEOPLE walk over a Black Lives Matter marking on 16th Street near the White House, where a peaceful rally this week was forcibly cleared by federal officers.

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