The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GOP, Secret Service battling over convention protesters

Party doesn’t want attendees to have to pass protest zone.

- By Josh Dawsey

Top Republican Party officials are escalating their fight with the Secret Service over the party’s convention in Milwaukee in July, demanding that the agency expand the security perimeter of the event so that protesters can be moved farther away from the arena where the main events will be held.

A cadre of senior GOP officials had a lengthy argument with Secret Service officials in Milwaukee on Thursday afternoon, according to three people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe a private meeting. The Republican­s repeatedly pushed the agency to widen the perimeter so that a prominent city park about a quarter-mile from the arena could not be used by the city for a designated protest zone. The Republican­s also again demanded a meeting with the head of the Secret Service to no avail, the people familiar with the meeting said.

The Secret Service officials — which included two senior officers — told the Republican National Committee that its director was not inclined to meet with them and that the agency was not planning to expand the perimeter to include the park, according to a person with direct knowledge of the meeting. That infuriated party officials.

Republican Party officials are now encouragin­g other top lawmakers to weigh in, with just two months before the convention.

On Friday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) wrote a letter to Kimberly Cheatle, the director of the Secret Service.

“I am deeply concerned about reports that the security perimeter around the Republican Convention site in Milwaukee may be creating a likely — and preventabl­e — area of conflict between protesters and Convention attendees and delegates,” McConnell wrote in the letter. “The RNC and Convention leadership have conveyed they have made a request to meet with USSS Leadership several weeks ago and that has yet to happen. That is unacceptab­le and I request you personally ensure this meeting takes place next week so that these concerns are heard and adjudicate­d.”

A top aide to Sen. Rick Scott of Florida also lobbied the agency, according to a spokesman for the senator. An aide to House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana said his office is also reviewing the situation.

A spokespers­on for the Secret Service said the agency is “confident” in the plan being worked out.

The plan is being “overseen by an executive steering committee made up of Secret Service personnel on the ground, as well as representa­tives from other federal, state, and local agencies, who have the greatest understand­ing of the host city and the expected security environmen­t for the event,” Anthony Guglielmi, chief of communicat­ions for the Secret Service, said in a statement Friday afternoon. “The developmen­t of the security plan is based on security considerat­ions, including risk and threat assessment­s, and is not a political matter.”

The fight comes as both Republican­s and Democrats are expecting significan­t protests this summer near their convention sites. Politico reported Friday that some Democrats are pushing extraordin­ary measures to limit protests in Chicago ahead of their convention, including holding part of the event online. In recent weeks, protests have gripped the country — particular­ly on college campuses — largely focusing on the Israel-Gaza war.

The RNC fight centers on Pere Lafayette Park in downtown Milwaukee, where the city plans to stage a “First Amendment Zone” for protesters to gather. Republican officials say the park’s location means thousands of convention attendees will have to pass protesters while walking to the arena, which they say could lead to clashes and violence.

The city says that the park is the closest public park to the arena that is outside the Secret Service perimeter and that the city is legally expected to give protesters “sight and sound” to the venue. City officials also say they are facing criticism from others that the park is not close enough.

The RNC has proposed other parks that are farther from the convention site, including one across the river from the arena.

In the 45-minute meeting, agency officials declined to move the perimeter, telling Republican Party officials that there was no intelligen­ce about credible threats that would require the perimeter to be expanded. Two Secret Service officials, the head of the agency’s team in Milwaukee and a senior member of the protectee division, told GOP leaders that they had conducted a “blast radius” survey — the area around a potential explosion where damage can occur — and that the park was not included.

Arbitraril­y moving the perimeter “without something to back it up” could lead to lawsuits, the officials argued.

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