Los Angeles Times

An angry left looks to tea party tactics

Protesters, hoping to build a movement, turn focus to their Congress members.

- By Christine Mai-Duc

There has been no shortage of opportunit­ies for the anti-Trump left to vent its angst since the president took office: Women’s marches, airport protests and impromptu rallies have become a near-daily feature of life in cities across California and the nation.

But people have also begun showing up at less likely venues: strip malls and business parks that house the offices of their members of Congress. Over the weekend, hundreds of people showed up to an overflowin­g town hall meeting being held by Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Elk Grove) in his Northern California district, which ended when McClintock was escorted out by police while a huge crowd demonstrat­ed outside.

“I think the importance was to show Mr. McClintock that we are not going to stand for anyone who’s on board with the Trump agenda,” said Doug Todd, who lives in McClintock’s district and helped organize some of the protesters. “We weren’t just going to smile and nod the whole time.”

Like many of the volunteer organizers, Todd considers his group an affiliate of Indivisibl­e, a group recently created by former congressio­nal staffers trying to deploy the same strategies against President Trump that made the antiObama tea party so successful.

Ezra Levin, who co-wrote a protest manual called “Indivisibl­e Guide” with his wife and other former staffers, says the tea party’s fo-

cus on congressio­nal representa­tives and just saying no to policy changes were the main ingredient­s of its secret sauce.

“They understood the fundamenta­ls of constituen­t power … because they know that every member of Congress wakes up every morning thinking, ‘Hey, what can I do to get reelected?’ ” Levin said.

Indivisibl­e has become a nonprofit since launching in December, and many of its thousands of registered groups are emerging in places like Orange County and the Central Valley, hardly known as incubators for progressiv­e politics.

The demonstrat­ions organized by these groups haven’t been going entirely smoothly. Last week, protesters at the offices of three Southern California Republican­s say they were met with locked doors and staffers who refused to pick up the phone.

About 200 people gathered outside the office of Rep. Mimi Walters (RIrvine) last week and couldn’t get inside. Walters spokeswoma­n Abigail Sigler said that the congresswo­man was in Washington at the time and that the office doors were locked because members of the group “have repeatedly harassed the congresswo­man’s staff,” including on Twitter.

A similar incident occurred at the office of Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Vista), where protesting constituen­ts complained that staffers “barricaded” themselves inside and would not accept letters and petitions.

In another incident last Tuesday, police emerged from Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r’s Huntington Beach office to confront the protesters, citing concerns about noise and crowding a fire exit.

Ken Grubbs, a Rohrabache­r spokesman, said the demonstrat­ors were “disruptive” and made it “impossible to work.” The door is routinely locked so that visitors must identify themselves, Grubbs said. Videos from the most recent incident show self-identified constituen­ts taking turns knocking on the door and then leaving messages on the intercom system. Building management called police, Grubbs said.

Rohrabache­r’s is one of seven Republican-held congressio­nal districts in California where Hillary Clinton received more votes than Trump did. Issa, who is regarded as one of the most vulnerable, won reelection by just 5,300 votes. All seven, including Walters, have been named as targets by Democrats for the 2018 election.

“I like to think that the fundamenta­l aspect of their job is to speak to their constituen­ts,” said Mike Lisenbery, who helped organize the demonstrat­ion at Rohrabache­r’s office. “Regardless of whether I or anybody else voted for him, it’s still our taxes that are paying his salary.”

The 33-year-old Apple store employee said he’s never been this politicall­y involved. In the five weeks since Lisenbery launched his Indivisibl­e OC group on Facebook, nearly 1,300 people have joined.

Levin’s guide instructs would-be activists to follow two tea party tenets: Show up on your home turf and play defense by fighting against policies instead of proposing new ones.

Many demonstrat­ions have largely done that by focusing on one or two “action items” with each encounter and calling on representa­tives to oppose specific Trump appointees or policies, such as the refugee ban or the Obamacare repeal.

Outside the Santa Clarita office of Republican Rep. Steve Knight last Thursday, nearly 200 people waited in a line that snaked out of his second-floor suite, summoned in part by local Indivisibl­e organizers. One by one, the protesters handed letters opposing the repeal of the Affordable Care Act to Knight’s staffers as L.A. County sheriff ’s deputies looked on. A Knight staffer thanked the protesters for coming and being respectful.

Kathy DeChellis, a 64year-old retiree and protester, said it was her first demonstrat­ion since the 1970s, when she marched through San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park to protest the Vietnam War.

“I decided it was time to get off my retired rear end and do something. We ought to take a lesson from the tea party, organize from the grass roots and get loud,” she said.

Matt Barreto, a UCLA political science professor who co-wrote a book about the tea party movement, said this fledgling movement’s success will depend on capturing rank-and-file Americans: At its height, roughly a quarter of Americans identified with the tea party.

“They’re going to need more of a following than the folks who regularly follow Elizabeth Warren and the ACLU on Twitter,” he said. “It is going to need to cross over to the general public, where you have people talking about it at the water cooler and their kids’ soccer games,” Barreto said.

Tea party members did that in part by creating sustained protests at dozens of town halls, especially during the August 2009 congressio­nal recess, and by building relationsh­ips with Republican­s like McClintock, who were friendly to their cause.

Some of the protests by Indivisibl­e have been aimed at liberal Democrats like California Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris to encourage them to be more vocal about opposing Trump’s actions. Protesters outside Feinstein’s home urged her to vote against confirming Jeff Sessions, Trump’s pick for attorney general.

Rep. Karen Bass of Los Angeles, a Democrat and former community organizer, sees the outpouring as a positive sign. “The organic movement is great and I am excited about it, and they will probably come to my office, too,” she said.

Bass said she’s seen an uptick in constituen­ts reaching out to her by phone, mail and in person — so many that she’s scheduled two extra town hall meetings in February.

Before his own town hall, tea party favorite McClintock said that he expected a higher-than-usual turnout by progressiv­e constituen­ts and that he was interested to hear what they had to say.

“When you’re in the political minority, you become very alarmed and you engage,” he said. “That was true of the tea party eight years ago, and it’s true of the left now.”

The meeting was reportedly raucous at times, and by Saturday afternoon, McClintock was less enthusiast­ic.

“I think there was an anarchist element among the organizers,” McClintock said after leaving the meeting. “It’s the first time I’ve ever had a police department have to extract me from a town hall, and I’ve done well over 100 of them in Congress.”

Organizers said demonstrat­ors voiced their opinions loudly, but the protest was nonviolent. “These were families and senior citizens and women.… It was American and it was supportive of our democracy,” Todd said.

The Roseville Police Department, which decided to escort McClintock out as a precaution, said the protesters were peaceful and no one was arrested.

McClintock disputed the comparison of the protesters to the tea party.

“The tea party engaged people by holding meetings and talking to people and writing letters,” McClintock said. “The way to change the course of the country is not to shout people down, not to riot in the streets.”

But the confrontat­ions at the height of the tea party movement were not all tranquil, either, prompting some Democratic members of Congress to avoid them altogether. In one of many memorable incidents, then Pennsylvan­ia Sen. Arlen Specter, a Democrat, left a town hall meeting after being booed and shoved by audience members.

 ?? Randall Benton Sacramento Bee ?? TRUMP supporter Lance Snead and protester Louise Isaacson face off outside a GOP congressma­n’s town hall in Roseville.
Randall Benton Sacramento Bee TRUMP supporter Lance Snead and protester Louise Isaacson face off outside a GOP congressma­n’s town hall in Roseville.
 ?? Randall Benton Sacramento Bee ?? POLICE escort Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Elk Grove) from a town hall meeting. “I think there was an anarchist element among the organizers,” the congressma­n said of the protest, which police called nonviolent.
Randall Benton Sacramento Bee POLICE escort Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Elk Grove) from a town hall meeting. “I think there was an anarchist element among the organizers,” the congressma­n said of the protest, which police called nonviolent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States