Santa Fe New Mexican

In summer of protest, a chance for change

Racial justice movement has raised public consciousn­ess but also exposed obstacles

- By Colleen Long, Kat Stafford and R.J. Rico

MWASHINGTO­N emorial Day brought the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapoli­s police, prompting hundreds of thousands of Americans to take to the streets in protest. President Donald Trump called Floyd’s death a “disgrace” and momentum built around policing reform.

But by Labor Day, the prospects for federal legislatio­n have evaporated. And Trump is seeking to leverage the violence that has erupted around some of the protests to scare white, suburban voters and encourage them to back his reelection campaign.

The three-month stretch between the symbolic kickoff and close of America’s summer has both galvanized broad public support for the racial justice movement and exposed the obstacles to turning that support into concrete political and policy changes. It has also clarified the choice for voters in the presidenti­al race between Trump, who rarely mentions Floyd or other Black Americans killed by police anymore, and Democrat Joe Biden, who argues that the summer of protests can become a catalyst for tackling systemic racism.

Polls show Biden has an advantage among Americans when it comes to which candidate can manage the country better through the protests. An ABC News/Ipsos poll out Friday showed 55 percent of Americans believe Trump is aggravatin­g the situation. When it comes to reducing violence, Americans favor Biden to Trump, 59 percent to 39 percent.

“No matter what he says or what he claims, you are not safer in Donald Trump’s America,” Biden said Friday.

Yet Trump’s campaign also sees an opportunit­y to appeal to some voters who may be turned off by scenes of violence cropping up around some of the protests, including in Kenosha, Wis., where police shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, seven times last month. The president has openly directed his appeals at the “suburban housewives of America” — especially white housewives — casting his reelection as the only thing preventing violence in cities from spilling into their neighborho­ods.

Trump traveled to Kenosha last week, thanked law enforcemen­t for their efforts and met with people whose businesses were destroyed in fires. He did not meet with Blake’s family. Biden did, on Thursday, while on a visit to the city.

A Marquette University Law School poll that came out before the Aug. 23 shooting showed support for the protests had slipped from 61 percent in June to 48 percent in August among voters in Wisconsin, one of the most crucial states in the November election. Among white Wisconsini­tes, approval of the protests dipped from 59 percent in June to 45 percent in August. Approval increased slightly for Black voters, to 78 percent from 77 percent. While approval fell among members of both parties, the dip was larger among Republican­s.

“I think that there was a lot of optimism surroundin­g the protests this summer in the wake of George Floyd because for the first time, we were starting to see all of these white people in the United States pay a great deal of attention to police brutality and racial injustice,” said Ashley Jardina, assistant professor of political science at Duke University, and author of the book White Identity Politics. “But white Americans have always had a low tolerance for protests and unrest around race in the U.S., and that’s particular­ly true when they think that protests become violent or involve the destructio­n of property,” Jardina added. The majority of racial justice protests have been peaceful. But some, including in Kenosha and Minneapoli­s, saw vandalism and violence. Federal officials have arrested more than 300 people since the demonstrat­ions began. A Trump supporter is charged with homicide in the shooting deaths of two protesters in Kenosha, and an anti-fascist shot and killed a rightwing protester in Portland, Ore., and was later killed during his arrest by law enforcemen­t.

Trump also has tried to link the protests to local increases in shootings, murders and other crimes in cities, including Kansas City, Mo.; Detroit; Chicago and New York, even though criminal justice experts say the spike defies easy explanatio­n in a year with historic unemployme­nt and a pandemic that has killed more than 180,000 people. Crime overall remains lower than it has been in years past and criminolog­ists also caution against a focus on crime statistics over a short time frame, such as week-to-week or month-to-month.

Dan Cooper, a white 51-year-old software engineer in Portland, remains supportive of the protests and the Black Lives Matter movement but fears the vandalism is “playing into the right’s hands.”

“It makes Portland look bad, and it makes it easy for the right to portray the city as being fundamenta­lly lawless when in reality it’s this tiny area downtown that’s mostly peaceful otherwise,” he said. “A few months ago they started off in a more BLM-focused way. It does seem like they’ve lost their way a little bit,” Cooper said of the protests.

National Black Lives Matter organizers have never asked for, encouraged or condoned looting or fighting with law enforcemen­t or police supporters on the streets, because they are protesting the violent harm done to their communitie­s.

Thenjiwe McHarris, a strategist with the Movement for Black Lives, a coalition of more than 150 organizati­ons, said Trump’s effort was a “desperate tactic to paint our movement a particular kind of way to stoke fear in communitie­s across the country and to try to steal this election.”

“What does it mean for the president of the United States to call the movement violent and dangerous and chaotic? It means that he’s putting a target and a bull’s-eye on thousands and thousands, perhaps even hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people, who are courageous and bold enough to say that Black lives matter.”

Leaders say the movement isn’t losing steam and the coalition has only begun to move toward its next phase of advocacy and grassroots work, and the majority of people support it “because they understand that what’s happening to Black people is such a grave injustice,” McHarris said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Demonstrat­ors take part in a June protest in downtown Los Angeles, sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died May 25 after he was restrained by Minneapoli­s police. His death launched a summer of massive protests, but the prospects for federal legislatio­n to come out of the Black Lives Matter movement seem to have evaporated.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Demonstrat­ors take part in a June protest in downtown Los Angeles, sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died May 25 after he was restrained by Minneapoli­s police. His death launched a summer of massive protests, but the prospects for federal legislatio­n to come out of the Black Lives Matter movement seem to have evaporated.

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