The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

SANDERS’ SUPPORTERS MAKE PRESENCE FELT

More than 50 cited by police as convention opens

- By Geoff Mulvihill and Megan Trimble

PHILADELPH­IA » Police briefly detained more than 50 people after they tried to storm the barricades outside the Democratic convention Monday evening in a show of anger over Bernie Sanders’ treatment by party leaders, even as he urged his supporters to fall in line behind Hillary Clinton.

Several hundred Sanders supporters and other demonstrat­ors converged in the sweltering heat on Broad Street and made their way 4 miles to the convention site as the gathering was being gaveled to order, chanting “Nominate Sanders or lose in November!” and “Hey, hey, ho, ho, the DNC has got to go!” They carried signs reading, “Never Hillary,” “Just Go to Jail Hillary” and “You Lost Me at Hillary.”

As tensions mounted outside the Wells Fargo Center, police moved metal fences into place and closed the nearest subway station to arriving trains. Fifty-five people were issued citations for disorderly conduct when protesters tried to climb over police barricades

at the edge of the security zone surroundin­g the convention, police said.

The anger reflected the widening rift inside the Democratic Party and the convention hall itself between Sanders’ supporters and Clinton’s. Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned as Democratic Party chairwoman Sunday over leaked emails suggesting the supposedly neutral Democratic National Committee played favorites during the primaries by siding with Clinton and bad-mouthing Sanders.

Speaking to delegates Monday morning, Sanders implored them to vote for Clinton, generating a chorus of boos.

“Brothers and sisters, this is the real world that we live in,” Sanders said. Donald Trump “is a bully and a demagogue.”

The protests took shape amid a punishing heat wave,

with oppressive humidity and temperatur­es in the mid-90s, along with the possibilit­y of severe thundersto­rms in the evening. The Fire Department handed out bottled water, and a few protesters were treated for heat-related problems.

Destine Madu, a protester from Maplewood, New Jersey, said it doesn’t matter if Sanders is calling on his backers to support Hillary Clinton.

“He’s like a Moses,” she said. “He led us to the promised land.”

The citations capped a day of demonstrat­ions around the city on the opening day of the convention.

About 100 Sanders supporters made their way into Philadelph­ia by marching across the Ben Franklin Bridge from Camden, New Jersey. Among them was Jim Glidden, a salesman from Batavia, New York. He carried a big sign saying the DNC stands for “Dishonest Nefarious Corrupt.”

“Only one guy is telling the truth out there,” he said, referring to Sanders. “And the

DNC shut him up with lies and cheating.”

Another participan­t in the bridge march, Deborah Armstrong, of Spokane, Washington, said she and her husband went bankrupt because of his health problems, which required a heart transplant.

“I’m Bernie or bust,” she said. “I’m not going to have Trump held up to our head like a gun.”

The demonstrat­ors espoused a variety of causes, including economic justice, socialism and marijuana legalizati­on. With Sanders out of the race, some of them were backing Green Party candidate Jill Stein.

Tensions rose when about 50 marchers sat down on Broad Street and refused to move unless the Mississipp­i state flag with the Confederat­e emblem was taken down from a lamppost. The flags of all 50 states fly from light poles on the street.

Two officers stood in front of the lamppost, not allowing anyone to climb it, as hecklers jeered: “Think for yourself. Be a real man.”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., march during a protest in downtown on July 25 in Philadelph­ia, during the first day of the Democratic National Convention.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., march during a protest in downtown on July 25 in Philadelph­ia, during the first day of the Democratic National Convention.
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Delegates hold up signs during the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia on July 25.
CAROLYN KASTER — ASSOCIATED PRESS Delegates hold up signs during the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia on July 25.

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