USA TODAY US Edition

Protests planned if Trump fires Mueller

Activist numbers have grown across the nation

- Fredreka Schouten Contributi­ng: Erin Kelly

WASHINGTON – More than 360,000 people have committed to take to the streets in nationwide protests should President Trump fire special counsel Robert Mueller or Rod Rosenstein, the Justice Department official overseeing Mueller’s inquiry into suspected Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

A coalition of roughly 100 mostly liberal groups is helping plan the 900 demonstrat­ions, which organizers said would launch within hours of the firing or other significan­t action to thwart the investigat­ion.

“No one is hoping for a constituti­onal crisis,” said David Sievers, campaign director of MoveOn, one of the groups behind the “Nobody is Above the Law” demonstrat­ions. “But we have to be ready for one.”

Although Trump routinely denounces Mueller’s investigat­ion as a “witch hunt,” he and his allies have denied that the president is in any rush to take action against Mueller. “We have no intention of firing the special counsel,” White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Sanders said this week.

Last week, Trump wouldn’t say whether he would ever fire Mueller or Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general. “They’ve been saying I’m going to get rid of them for the last three months, four months, five months, and they’re still here,” Trump said during a news conference. “So we want to get this investigat­ion over with, done with.”

Bob Anderson, 94, a retired lawyer in Emeryville, Calif., has never protested before, but the decorated World War II reconnaiss­ance pilot said that if Trump acts to thwart the investigat­ion, he will don his old Army Air Corps uniform and head to City Hall in Berkeley to protest.

“I want to stand up and be counted,” said Anderson, a Democrat who supported Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al race. “If I don’t do it now, when? At 94, the clock is ticking.”

“The more (Trump) fusses about the ‘Russian witch hunt,’ the more a reasonable person wonders, ‘Hey, what have you got to hide?’ ” Anderson said.

White House officials did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comments about the planned demonstrat­ions.

Dramatic growth

About a dozen groups, including MoveOn and Public Citizen, began protest preparatio­ns last summer in the months after Trump fired FBI director James Comey, who oversaw the Russian investigat­ion. Their numbers have grown dramatical­ly in the months since and include the American Federation of Teachers, the Sierra Club, Service Employees Internatio­nal Union and Common Defense, a veterans group.

About 40,000 people have registered for the protests in the weeks since the FBI’s raid April 9 on the home and offices of Trump’s longtime attorney, Michael Cohen, said Lisa Gilbert, vice president of legislativ­e affairs for Public Citizen, one of the groups planning the demonstrat­ions.

Participan­ts sign up online for the demonstrat­ions, which are planned in all 50 states, the nation’s capital and U.S. territorie­s. The protests will be triggered by key events, such as the firing of Mueller or Rosenstein, repealing the regulation­s that establishe­d the special counsel’s office or pardoning witnesses.

If one of those “red lines” was crossed before 2 p.m., protests would start at 5 p.m. the same day. If events happened after 2 p.m., the demonstrat­ions would move to noon the following day.

Last week, the Pittsburgh Police Department ordered its plaincloth­es detectives to start bringing uniforms and riot gear to work because of “a potential large-scale protest” in the city’s center should Trump force out Mueller.

In a statement, Pittsburgh Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich said officials are simply preparing for a potential protest as they would for “extreme weather.”

About 4,000 people have signed up in Pittsburgh, said Tracy Baton, 54, a social worker who is helping to organize the Mueller-focused demonstrat­ions in the city.

Baton, who directs Women’s March events in Pittsburgh, said she expects any protests to be peaceful, and she worked with city officials to move the demonstrat­ion to 6 p.m., instead of the 5 p.m. start time planned in other cities, to avoid rush-hour disruption­s.

“We have had no problems in the past, and I have no reason to believe we will in the future,” she said of the possible Pittsburgh event.

Sustained lobbying

As they wait for protests that may never come, organizers encourage activists to engage in other actions, including lobbying Capitol Hill to pass bipartisan legislatio­n that would protect Mueller.

The Senate Judiciary Committee passed such a measure last month by a vote of 14 to 7, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said that he would not bring the bill to the Senate floor for a vote.

The bill says Mueller or any future special counsel could be fired only “for misconduct, derelictio­n of duty, incapacity, conflict of interest, or other good cause.” A special counsel who is fired could appeal to the courts to be reinstated.

In their planning calls every Friday, protest organizers plot what steps they would take to pressure the Republican­controlled Congress after a Mueller or Rosenstein firing. They include asking the Senate to set up a Watergate-style select committee to investigat­e.

“This can’t be a single moment of protest,” Public Citizens’ Gilbert said. “The effort has to be sustained.”

“No one is hoping for a constituti­onal crisis. But we have to be ready for one.” David Sievers MoveOn

 ?? JASPER COLT/USA TODAY ?? Reggie Hubbard of MoveOn displays signs the group prepared for nationwide protests should President Trump take action to thwart special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into suspected election meddling.
JASPER COLT/USA TODAY Reggie Hubbard of MoveOn displays signs the group prepared for nationwide protests should President Trump take action to thwart special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into suspected election meddling.

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