USA TODAY US Edition

Spencer gets chilly reception at Fla. visit

Protesters outside, hecklers inside: White nationalis­t’s speech flops at university

- Rick Neale

Three days after Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency in anticipati­on of his visit, white nationalis­t Richard Spencer took the stage Thursday at the University of Florida. Greeted by loud chants of “Say it loud! Say it clear! Nazis are not welcome here,” Spencer told hecklers that the protests stifled free expression, saying “I feel sorry for you.” Inside the venue, crowd outbursts filled much of the event’s opening 20 minutes as obscene remarks and gestures popped up throughout.

“This right here, what you’re doing, is the best recruiting tool for us that you could possibly ever give us.”

Eli Mosley, leader of Identity Europa, to crowd heckling Richard Spencer

Loud chants of “Say it loud! Say it clear! Nazis are not welcome here!” greeted white nationalis­t Richard Spencer when he took the stage Thursday for a controvers­ial University of Florida speaking appearance.

Spencer spoke and — eventually — fielded questions from a boisterous audience packed with opponents at Phillips Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Florida.

“I feel sorry for you. Do you know how this is going to be read? Do you think this is going to be read as, ‘Great victory for U of F?’ No,” Spencer told the heckling crowd.

“It’s going to be read as, ‘The University of Florida is filled with childlike Antifa (anti-fascists) who shout at people — as opposed to talking to them,’ ” Spencer said.

Organizers had announced that 700 tickets would be distribute­d, but numerous seats were unoccupied across the theater. Hundreds of sign-waving protesters came to the venue.

“Go home, racist, go home!” the crowd chanted at Spencer, standing and shaking fists to- ward the stage. He exchanged barbs with the audience.

“You are attempting to turn your academic community into a stifling place. Is that what you want?” Spencer asked.

Monday, Gov. Rick Scott declared a state of emergency for Alachua County before the event. Violence marred an altright rally in August in Charlottes­ville, Va., where Heather Heyer was struck by a car and killed.

The campus remained open for classes Thursday, though numerous roads and facilities were shut down. Hundreds of law enforcemen­t officers patrolled the city, and officials blocked roadways, using cement barricades, dump trucks and other large obstacles.

Hundreds of protesters congregate­d at the ticket distributi­on site, sparking confusion among those trying to attend.

Inside the venue, crowd outbursts filled much of the event’s opening 20 minutes. Obscene remarks and gestures popped up throughout.

Fielding questions from the audience, Spencer disavowed comparison­s to Adolf Hitler. He said he was not responsibl­e for the violence in Charlottes­ville, and the circumstan­ces of Heyer’s death remain unclear — though the crowd chanted, “It’s your fault!”

Spencer was joined on stage by Eli Mosley, leader of Identity Europa. Mosley likened Spencer’s hecklers to “wild hyenas” who had been “brainwashe­d by anti-white propaganda from their professors, from the media.”

“This right here, what you’re doing, is the best recruiting tool for us that you could possibly ever give us,” Mosley said.

 ?? JEREMIAH WILSON, TCPALM.COM, VIA USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Demonstrat­ors protest the speech of white nationalis­t Richard Spencer on the University of Florida campus Thursday in Gainsville, Fla.
JEREMIAH WILSON, TCPALM.COM, VIA USA TODAY NETWORK Demonstrat­ors protest the speech of white nationalis­t Richard Spencer on the University of Florida campus Thursday in Gainsville, Fla.
 ?? JEREMIAH WILSON, USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Protesters prepare for a speech by white nationalis­t Richard Spencer at the University of Florida.
JEREMIAH WILSON, USA TODAY NETWORK Protesters prepare for a speech by white nationalis­t Richard Spencer at the University of Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States