The Day

PEACEFUL PROTEST

Hundreds of events took place across the country

- DANA JENSEN/THE DAY

People hold a demonstrat­ion Thursday at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument at the Parade Plaza in New London. It was held because participan­ts feel special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into possible Russian collusion during the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election is threatened since the ousting of Jeff Sessions as U.S. attorney general. The rally was nationally coordinate­d by MoveOn.org and people signed up to participat­e in a rally near them.

New London — More than 100 people gathered for a demonstrat­ion at Parade Plaza early Thursday evening, to call for the protection of Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into foreign interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

While the event was billed as a silent demonstrat­ion, gatherers intermitte­ntly cheered as cars turning off Bank Street honked — ostensibly in support — and they occasional­ly chanted statements like, “This is what democracy looks like.”

It was one of hundreds of demonstrat­ions planned across the country in response to the resignatio­n of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, which Sessions said was at the request of President Donald Trump, on Wednesday. Sessions had recused himself from the Mueller investigat­ion, which angered Trump.

The Washington Post reported Thursday that acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker — who expressed concern last year in an op-ed that the investigat­ion could “start to look like a political fishing expedition” — does not intend to recuse himself from the probe.

That “he has already verbally strategize­d on how to kneecap the investigat­ion, the FBI investigat­ion, is a very obvious threat to learning whether ... our president has been bought,” said Andrea Kennedy, a Massachuse­tts resident who chose to attend the New London demonstrat­ion because she was visiting her parents in East Lyme.

So how did hundreds of protests get scheduled on such short notice?

The progressiv­e advocacy group MoveOn had organized a rapid-response network, called Nobody is Above the Law, in case Trump “crossed a red line.”

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., attended the rally in New Haven, while other events were held in Danbury, Fairfield and other Connecticu­t cities. At the New London event, some had signed up to get email alerts on the response last year, while others signed up last night.

Falling into the latter camp was Luke Karis, co-president of the Connecticu­t College Democrats and one

of about eight students from the college to attend, he said.

Karis commented that it’s “pretty clear” there was Russian interferen­ce. (In a report the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce released in early 2017, the FBI, CIA and National Security Agency expressed “high confidence” that Russia interfered in the election.)

“I think this shouldn’t be a partisan issue, this should be a bipartisan issue,” said Karis, who was holding a sign reading “Protect the Mueller investigat­ions.”

Referencin­g a parody of Shaggy’s song “It Wasn’t Me,” Groton resident David Janetos held up a sign reading, “Special Counsel got ya sweatin’ like crazy saying that it’s a witch hunt.”

Janetos said he came out both to raise awareness of the issue and urge passage of the Special Counsel Independen­ce and Integrity Act. Two Democratic and two Republican senators introduced the bill in April.

“I say, let the investigat­ion come to its conclusion, and we will find out what the facts are,” said Preston resident Rosemary O’Lone, who was holding a sign that said “Resist.”

She added of Trump, “It’s entirely possible that there have been no crimes committed on his part. However, there have been a lot of apples to drop.”

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 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY ?? People hold a demonstrat­ion Thursday at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument at the Parade Plaza in New London. The rally was nationally coordinate­d by MoveOn.org and people signed up to participat­e in a rally near them.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY People hold a demonstrat­ion Thursday at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument at the Parade Plaza in New London. The rally was nationally coordinate­d by MoveOn.org and people signed up to participat­e in a rally near them.

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