The Mercury News

Militia shines the spotlight on armed protest

- By Sara Burnett

Gun-carrying protesters have been a common sight at some demonstrat­ions calling for coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns to be lifted. But an armed militia’s involvemen­t in an angry protest in the Michigan statehouse Thursday marked an escalation that drew condemnati­on and shined a spotlight on the practice of bringing weapons to protest.

The American Patriot Rally started on the statehouse steps, where members of the Michigan Liberty Militia stood guard with weapons and tactical gear, their faces partially covered. They later moved inside the Capitol along with several hundred protesters, who demanded to be let onto the House floor, which is prohibited. Some protesters with guns — which are allowed in the statehouse — went to the Senate gallery, where a senator said some armed men shouted at her, and some senators wore bulletproo­f vests.

For some observers, the images of armed men in tactical gear at a state Capitol were an unsettling symbol of rising tensions in a nation grappling with crisis. Others saw evidence of racial bias in the way the protesters were treated by police.

For some politician­s, there was fresh evidence of the risk of aligning with a movement with clear ties to far-right groups.

Prominent Michigan Republican­s on Friday criticized the showing, with the GOP leader of the state Senate referring to some protesters as “a bunch of jackasses” who “used intimidati­on and the threat of physical harm to stir up fear and feed rancor.”

President Donald Trump, who has been criticized in the past for condoning extremist views, called the protesters “very good people” and urged Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer to “make a deal.”

Michigan has been the epicenter of the political showdown over how to contain the spread of the deadly virus without decimating the economy. About a quarter of the state’s workforce has filed for unemployme­nt, and nearly 4,000 people have died.

Rally organizer Ryan Kelley said the event was intended to pressure Republican­s to reject Whitmer’s plan to continue restrictio­ns on work and travel. He called the protest a “huge win,” noting the Republican-controlled Senate refused to extend Whitmer’s coronaviru­s emergency declaratio­n — though she said Friday her stay-at-home order remains in effect.

Kelley, a 38-year-old real estate broker, said he and other organizers are not part of a formal group but represent people who have been harmed by the stay-athome order. He said he invited the Michigan Liberty Militia, which is listed as an anti-government group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, to serve as “security.” He suggested anyone who had a problem with their presence should read the Constituti­on and “live life without fear.”

Gun-carrying protesters outside state capitols are a regular occurrence in many states, especially in Republican-leaning ones. But rarely do such protests converge at the same time around the country like they have during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In Wisconsin, about a dozen men, several wearing camouflage, carried what appeared to be assault rifles and other long guns and stood around a makeshift guillotine at a protest attended by about 1,500 people. In Arizona, a group of men armed with rifles were among hundreds of protesters who demonstrat­ed at the Capitol last month demanding Republican Gov. Doug Ducey lift his stay-at-home order. Many in the crowd also carried holstered pistols.

Gun groups have been involved in organizing several of these protests — which drew activists from a range of conservati­ve causes.

Gun rights advocates believe the restrictio­ns on some businesses and closure of government offices are a threat to their right to own a gun, said Michael Hammond, legislativ­e counsel for Gun Owners of America, a group that bills itself as the “no compromise” gun lobby.

Hammond said he routinely gets messages and emails from people around the country, complainin­g that authoritie­s are making it impossible to exercise their Second Amendment rights. In some cases, that has meant orders closing gun shops or gun ranges or offices shutting down that process permits.

But Shannon Watts, the founder of Moms Demand Action, a guncontrol group, considers these protests organized by the ultraright and not necessaril­y reflective of most gun owners.

Though it’s legal to openly carry firearms inside some state capitols, Watts called it “dangerous to normalize this. Armed intimidati­on has no place in our political debate.” She said those carrying guns at protests are almost always white men and are “a vocal minority of the country” that opposes the stay-at-home orders.

An overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans support stay-at-home orders and other efforts to slow the spread of the virus, according to a recent survey from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The visual of heavily armed protesters, mostly white men, occupying a government building to a measured response by law enforcemen­t is a particular­ly jarring one for many African Americans.

It draws a stark contrast to the images that emerged from Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, when crowds of unarmed, mostly black men, women and children took to the streets in protest after a white police officer shot and killed an unarmed black teenager named Michael Brown. Police shot tear gas to disperse the crowds, further inflaming the tensions between predominan­tly black community and law enforcemen­t. It worsened when members of an armed militia group called the Oath Keepers arrived, some of them armed and sitting on rooftops. Jon Belmar, who was then St. Louis County’s police chief, said at the time that the presence of the group, whose members wore camouflage, bulletproo­f vests and openly carried rifles and pistols, was “unnecessar­y and inflammato­ry.”

“Systemical­ly, blackness is treated like a more dangerous weapon than a white man’s gun ever will, while whiteness is the greatest shield of safety,” said Brittany Packnett, a prominent national activist who protested in Ferguson.

The Michigan demonstrat­ors, she added, “are what happens when people of racial privilege confuse oppression with inconvenie­nce. No one is treading on their rights. We’re all just trying to live.”

Trump, meanwhile, suggested it was Whitmer who should be moved to action.

“The Governor of Michigan should give a little, and put out the fire,” the president tweeted Friday. “These are very good people, but they are angry. They want their lives back again, safely! See them, talk to them, make a deal.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A protester carries his rifle at the state Capitol in Lansing, Michigan, on Thursday. Hoisting American flags and signs, protesters denounced Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s stay-at-home order and business restrictio­ns.
PAUL SANCYA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A protester carries his rifle at the state Capitol in Lansing, Michigan, on Thursday. Hoisting American flags and signs, protesters denounced Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s stay-at-home order and business restrictio­ns.
 ?? MICHIGAN OFFICE OF GOVERNOR VIA AP ?? Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer
MICHIGAN OFFICE OF GOVERNOR VIA AP Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer

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