Trump takes note as the far right lobbies for violent crackdown on peaceful protests
As protests over the police killing of George Floyd
continue across the US, a slew of influential rightwing figures have been
urging an ever more violent crackdown on the demonstrations – and it appears
Donald Trump is listening.
Republican politicians, media personalities and
rightwing activists have floated ideas including deploying specific units of
the military, while one Republican candidate for Congress has even suggested
she will shoot protesters.
With a president who has previously formulated policy
based on what is being mooted on conservative Fox News or among the rightwing
Twitter-sphere, the consequences of this lobbying for violence could be severe.
Tom Cotton, a US senator for Arkansas who is said to
be plotting a run for president in 2024, has been one of the loudest voices.
“If local law enforcement is overwhelmed and needs
backup, let’s see how tough these antifa terrorists are when they’re facing off
with the 101st Airborne Division,” Cotton tweeted on Monday, pulling off the
neat trick of both labelling anti-fascist activists “terrorists” and plugging
his own service in the US army.
In a follow-up tweet, Cotton added: “And, if
necessary, the 10th Mountain, 82nd Airborne, 1st Cav, 3rd Infantry—whatever it
takes to restore order. No quarter for insurrectionists, anarchists, rioters,
and looters.”
The phrase “no quarter” has historically meant to
kill opponents, rather than arrest them, as MediaMatter’s Lis Power swiftly
pointed out, but Cotton’s demand for the US military to take to the streets of
cities and towns across the country was cheered by the president.
“100% Correct. Thank you Tom!” Trump tweeted, as he
reposted Cotton’s idea.
In commentary on the demonstrations against police
brutality, Cotton has repeatedly painted the situation in the US as a dystopian
nightmare. He has suggested, wrongly, that there are “mass gatherings of
rioters destroying our cities”, whereas the majority of the protests in the US
have been non-violent.
In a column, published by the New York Times amid
controversy and under the headline “Send in the troops”, Cotton suggested
“rioters have plunged many American cities into anarchy”. This will probably
come as a surprise to people living in American cities, but this framing
allowed Cotton to carry on his demand for a potentially violent crackdown on
the protests.
“One thing above all else will restore order to our
streets: an overwhelming show of force,” Cotton said in the NYT article,
suggesting only this could end what he called an “orgy of violence”.
The agitating hasn’t been restricted to Cotton.
On Sunday Noah Pollak, a writer for the conservative
Washington Free Beacon, posted a photograph on Twitter of inmates being held in
stress positions at Guantánamo Bay – the US naval prison where many Muslim men
have been tortured since it opened in 2002 – along with the suggestion:
“We did it with al-Qaida terrorists, now it’s time
to do it with antifa. Imagine the joyous feeling if you knew the people wearing
orange jumpsuits in this picture had face piercings, purple hair, and were from
Portland, Oregon. Camp X-Ray, GITMO.”
As the protests spread to cities across the country,
the tough talk, largely from people paid to sit at desks, came thick and fast.
“Now that we clearly see antifa as terrorists, can
we hunt them down like we do those in the Middle East?,” tweeted Matt Gaetz, a
Florida congressman who has built a political career through his fealty to
Trump. Gaetz’s post was blocked by Twitter, who deemed it to be “glorifying
violence”.
In Georgia, Republican congressional candidate
Marjorie Greene filmed a campaign advertisement which showed her standing
outside a house holding what appeared to be a semi-automatic rifle.
“I have a message for antifa terrorists,” Greene
said in the ad. She then cocked the gun and added: “Stay the hell out of
north-west Georgia.”
Texan congressman Dan Crenshaw – another Trump
favorite – joined the clamor for states to use the national guard on Tuesday,
when he tweeted that New York City, where looting took place in some parts of
the Bronx and midtown Manhattan earlier in the week “is in ruins”.
At times it has seemed as if the right were
straining to one-up each other. On the social media platform Gab, Jacob Wohl, a
pro-Trump activist and conspiracy theorist who has gained a following among
conservatives, suggested mercenaries should be sent to deal with protesters and
also proposed that the military should be send into cities and given
“shoot-to-kill orders”.
Whether Trump has been guided by the bloodlust or
not, his militaristic response to the protests will probably have pleased many
on the right.
On Monday Trump said he would “deploy the United
States military” to states that he deemed had not responded adequately to
protests.
To do so Trump would have to invoke the rarely used
Insurrection Act of 1807, which allows the president to deploy the military
domestically. Typically state governors have requested the deployment of the
military, rather than having the federal armed forces foisted upon them,
although a provision of the law does allow Trump to overrule states.
Later, police teargassed their way through a crowd
of peaceful protesters at the White House so Trump could hold up a Bible
outside a church, while on Tuesday, dozens of the District of Columbia national
guard, in full military garb, stood on patrol at Washington DC’s Lincoln Memorial.




