The Denver Post

Yiannopoul­os holds short, small rally

- By Daisy Nguyen

BERKELEY, CALIF.» A weeklong conservati­ve free speech showcase at famously liberal University of California was supposed to start Sunday. But it apparently ended the same day after a blink-and-youmiss-it appearance by right-wing firebrand Milo Yiannopoul­os and angry shouts from small groups of competing protesters who came to celebrate and condemn him.

Yiannopoul­os blew kisses, posed for selfies and briefly addressed a few dozen supporters at the campus while a slightly larger crowd protesting him was kept separate by police. Wearing sunglasses and an American flag hoodie under a denim jacket, he spoke without amplificat­ion for a few moments on the steps of Sproul Hall. Then he led a rendition of “The StarSpangl­ed Banner” before being whisked away in a car. The whole appearance lasted less than a half hour.

Jake Wall, a college student from Los Angeles in town to visit his girlfriend, described Yiannopolo­us’ showing as a “meet-andgreet.” He said Yiannapoul­os couldn’t make any points without a microphone and promised his admirers he’d return to deliver a proper address.

“When you can’t speak through a mike, how effective was that?” Wall asked. University officials said a request for amplificat­ion, required under school rules, was never made.

A defiant Yiannapoul­os announced Saturday that he would appear at an unsanction­ed rally despite the sudden cancellati­on of a planned four-day conservati­ve event dubbed Free Speech Week. The campus conservati­ve group Berkeley Patriot, which had been organizing the gathering with Yiannopoul­os, told university administra­tors that the group would cancel it, the university said. Yiannopoul­os said he was blindsided by the news.

Those hoping to hear him speak Sunday were herded through metal detectors, while demonstrat­ors who came out against the appearance were held behind barricades on Sproul Plaza.

Kat McLain, 26, said she considers herself a liberal but decided to come out to support conservati­ves’ right to be heard. “There’s no way to come to a peaceful resolution until we can stop and talk to each other,” she said.

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