USA TODAY US Edition

Truth about rallies

About 400 cities hosted 970 demonstrat­ions

- Contributi­ng: Trevor Hughes and Ryan Miller

New research using data to track protests across America shows 80% have been peaceful, contrary to the Trump administra­tion’s messaging.

WASHINGTON – Since President Donald Trump’s election, mass demonstrat­ions have largely been concentrat­ed in major cities. The Women’s March, for example, has drawn massive crowds in Washington, D.C., and other metropolit­an areas in the past three years. In 2018, thousands took to the streets to support the special counsel investigat­ion on Russia.

But the death of George Floyd, a black man whose neck was pinned to the ground under the knee of a Minneapoli­s police officer, sparked the most widespread mass demonstrat­ions in recent memory. Despite the threat of a global pandemic, crowds large and small – from rural towns, to suburbs, to big coastal cities – gathered to protest racial injustice and police brutality against African Americans.

The vast majority – 80% – appeared to be peaceful, according to new research that contradict­s the emphasis the White House has often put on the instances of looting and rioting.

As of Tuesday, more than 970 protests had taken place in about 400 cities and towns across the country, according to research conducted by the marketing firm Ipsos and teams from the Universiti­es of Chicago and Oxford.

“The numbers and the breadth are actually pretty impressive,” said Chris Jackson, senior vice president at Ipsos. “We’re seeing these protests happening in all 50 states . ... It’s not just the big cities; it’s towns across the board. And the large majority of these protests have been peaceful protests.”

Trump, who has described himself as a “law-and-order” president, has been sharply critical of the protesters and has urged authoritie­s to “dominate” the streets, including in discussion­s with governors in which he accused them of being “weak” in their responses.

Using data to track protests

Researcher­s scraped social media feeds to identify where protests were occurring on a given day and then crossrefer­enced them against news reports, satellite imagery and Google Street View for verificati­on.

Researches also used cellphone aggregate data to find large gatherings of people. Jackson said gatherings that were not captured on social media weren’t included in their data.

“I don’t think this is necessaril­y the total of everything that’s happened . ...

This is the best picture we can get in this period in time,” Jackson said, adding that the data will continue to change as protests continue.

A separate analysis by USA TODAY, which relied on local news coverage, found widespread demonstrat­ions in more than 1,000 places across all 50 states.

‘Tipping point’

Surprising­ly, Jackson said, protests were occurring even in solidly or moderately conservati­ve places where police abuse of black people isn’t a typical rallying cry. Nebraska, Montana, Wyoming and the Dakotas – predominan­tly white and solidly red states that don’t normally deal with issues involving racial injustice – each saw a handful of largely peaceful demonstrat­ions.

Nebraska may be mostly white, but it has one of the fastest-growing foreign born population­s, said Sergio Wals, who teaches at the University of NebraskaLi­ncoln’s political science department and its Institute for Ethnic Studies. The local school’s English Language Learning Program teaches children from families representi­ng about 150 different countries and 125 different languages.

The protests in Lincoln and other parts of the state may reflect the growing diversity. But many people were also just moved by the brutality they saw in the video of Floyd being held down by officers, Wals said.

“Whomever watched those painful eight minutes and 46 seconds, that’s just the trigger, that’s just the tipping point for a lot of people,” he said.

Also poignant, he added, was a televised scene during the protests in Lincoln when a top state patrol officer knelt with protesters on the steps of the Capitol for nine minutes.

“That was a very powerful image of a glimpse of change we might about to see,” Wals said.

Protests were widespread in Southern states such as Louisiana, Alabama and Mississipp­i, where the issue of race has long been at the forefront. But states such as Virginia and West Virginia also saw protests far from more liberal, urban centers.

The protests are a reflection of how much has changed in a relatively short time. In 2014, only about 4 in 10 people saw the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York as indicative of broader problems in policing. Today, nearly 7 in 10 Americans said Floyd’s death reflects broader issues, according to a Washington PostSchar School poll.

Protests continue

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Protests over Floyd’s death continued as his funeral was held Tuesday. Derek Chauvin, the white officer who held his knee on Floyd’s neck, is facing a second-degree murder charge. Three other officers were charged with aiding and abetting.

National media coverage has largely focused on major cities, where peaceful protests were marred by looting, vandalism, burning cars and thousands of arrests.

In Minneapoli­s, USA TODAY reporters witnessed small groups, dressed in black, carrying shields and wearing knee pads, destroy property and threaten journalist­s who photograph­ed them.

In Washington, D.C., tensions rose between the federal and municipal government­s over how to police the protests, as Trump discussed deploying active-duty forces. Thousands – among the largest crowds seen since protests began in May – took to the streets on Saturday.

In New York City, protests were largely peaceful, although hundreds were arrested. A police officer who was captured on video shoving a woman is facing assault and other charges. More than 300 miles north, in Buffalo, police officers were suspended and charged with second-degree assault after a viral video showed them pushing a 75-yearold man to the ground.

Maureen Groppe and Kristine Phillips

Historical comparison

Terry Madonna, director of the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Franklin and Marshall College in Pennsylvan­ia, called the protests “the largest we’ve had in modern history.”

“Right now,” he said, “the dominant aspect of American politics is police and police reform.”

Tamara Herold, director of the Crowd Management Research Council at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said the scope is reminiscen­t of the Civil Rights movement and Vietnam War protests in the 1960s and 1970s but it’s difficult to compare. The size, location and other details of the past events were not documented the way today’s actions are, she said.

Herold sees some factors not present in past movements that likely contribute­d to the size and scope of the recent protests. Because of the pandemic, for example, more people are unemployed or working from home, making it easier for them to participat­e.

People are wearing masks. Those who study the dynamics of crowds say a sense of anonymity encourages more violent or disruptive behavior.

Herold said that could contribute to the fact that about 1 in 5 of the recent protests had observable violence or damage, according to Ipsos.

“I think this number is a little bit higher than you would anticipate,” Herold said.

Protests in swing states

The top battlegrou­nd states of Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida that will likely decide the 2020 presidenti­al election saw protests not only in their largest cities but also in more conservati­ve parts of the states.

“If there was a rock-ribbed Republican area in Michigan, it’s West Michigan,” said David Dulio, director of the Center for Civic Engagement at Oakland University.

But on Sunday, more than 400 people marched in Holland to call for an end to police brutality.

“Silence is violence,” read the sign of one protester, a white woman who joined others in front of city hall.

 ?? MAUREEN GROPPE/USA TODAY ?? Sherese Teixeira, 33, and Krystin Gambrell, 34, of Washington, D.C., rest in front of graffiti on the White House Historical Associatio­n.
MAUREEN GROPPE/USA TODAY Sherese Teixeira, 33, and Krystin Gambrell, 34, of Washington, D.C., rest in front of graffiti on the White House Historical Associatio­n.

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