San Francisco Chronicle

Berkeley: No permit for right-wing rally

- By Michael Bodley Michael Bodley is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: mbodley@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @michael_bodley

The organizers of the latest rally in Berkeley, billed by right-wing activists as a demonstrat­ion against Marxism, have been denied a permit by the city.

In a letter, Deputy City Manager Jovan Grogan told organizers of the event planned for Sunday in Civic Center Park — the home in recent months to a growing number of such demonstrat­ions — that the “totality of circumstan­ces” prevented Berkeley from being able to safely host the event.

Organizers did not immediatel­y return requests for comment.

On social media Thursday, the far-right event, advertised online as a “No to Marxism” rally, showed no signs of stopping.

Police in Berkeley have given no indication­s that they will stand down, and similar past events have moved forward, regardless.

Though other skirmishes in Berkeley in recent months have seen bloodshed, as well as arrests, Mayor Jesse Arreguin has expressed a heightened level of concern for this weekend.

Arreguin has said that racists are not welcome in Berkeley, and the mayor has repeatedly urged people of all political persuasion­s to avoid the park Sunday.

In three responses to organizers seeking to host events at the park Sunday, Grogan wrote that the applicatio­ns lacked a number of measures to ensure safety.

They included, Grogan said: a lack of proper security, failing to provide proper identifica­tion of organizers and turning in applicatio­ns late.

Grogan also alluded to “national events” in explaining the denial.

Recently, a large gathering of white supremacis­ts and neo-Nazis in Charlottes­ville, Va. — and the widespread condemnati­on of President Trump’s initial refusal to denounce them specifical­ly — have ratcheted up racial tensions in the United States. A woman died in Charlottes­ville.

Organizers of the Berkeley rally have denied a racial motivation and have defended the need for the event.

Some have expressed loyalty to Trump, saying that the blue Bay Area is as good a place to stand up for their president — and for free speech — as any.

How to respond to the rally planned for Sunday has divided Bay Area activists, many of them left-leaning.

The loose collective known as antifa has pledged to meet those they call white supremacis­ts in Berkeley, including violently, if they deem it necessary.

Others have advocated a more peaceful tack, saying they will use props and humor to try to keep the peace.

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