As Trump Takes
Power, Politicians Around the US Move to Make Protesting
Illegal
By Sarah Cronin
January 22,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Antimedia"-
Indiana
passed a
bill on Wednesday that authorizes police officers to
shut down highway protesting “by any means necessary.”
S.B. 285, as it is known, obliges a public official
to dispatch all available officers within 15 minutes of
discovering any assembly of 10 or more people who are
obstructing vehicle traffic.
The bill then
authorizes the responding officers to clear roads “by
any means necessary.”
Critics are
calling it the “Block Traffic and You Die” bill, an
apt name for a bill that has co-opted the phrase “any
means necessary,” used famously in
speech delivered by Malcolm X during the Civil
Rights movement, turning it into a threat against
government dissent (with no apparent awareness of the
irony).
S.B. 285 is
among a collection of increasingly hostile
‘anti-obstruction’ laws that have been quietly submitted
in states around the nation over the past few months. A
report by The Intercept
published Wednesday tracked five such anti-protest
laws introduced by Republican lawmakers in different
states, four of which are currently pending.
One of the most
disturbing among them is
House Bill N. 1203, a bill introduced earlier this
month by North Dakota lawmaker Keith Kempenich
in response to the Dakota Access Pipeline Protests.
The bill would exempt motorists who hit demonstrators
with their cars from any liability in cases where the
victims were “obstructing vehicular traffic on a
public road, street, or highway.” This twisted take
on protest criminalization comes short of condoning
manslaughter as a viable means of crowd control.
Also this
month, Minnesota State Representative Kathy Lohmer led
the effort on submitting
H.F. 322, a bill that would re-classify obstructing
highway traffic from a misdemeanor to a “gross
misdemeanor” and would authorize government units to sue
protesters for “public safety response costs related
to unlawful assemblies.”
The proposed
legislation is strikingly reminiscent of Washington
State Senator Eric Ericksen’s proposal to punish
protesters as ‘economic terrorists,’ which Anti-Media
first
reported on in November.
All of the
proposed laws share a common trait in that they were all
adopted in response to a major protest event in that
state. H.F. 322 was submitted shortly after a
judge dismissed the riot charges against protesters
who took to the St. Paul Interstate last July in a
demonstration against the police shooting of
Philando Castille. Ericksen’s “economic terrorism”
bill announcement came just days after anti-fracking
protesters blocked railroad tracks in Olympia,
Washington. DAPL protests inspired both the Indiana and
North Dakota bills.
These
retroactive responses on behalf of Republican state
lawmakers are also seen as preemptive strikes against
the threat of increased protests during the Trump
presidency.
As ACLU staff
attorney Lee Rowland expressed in
an interview with The Intercept, these
so-called ‘obstruction bills’ are but thinly disguised
efforts to squash any government dissent.
“A law
that would allow the state to charge a protester $10,000
for stepping in the wrong place, or encourage a driver
to get away with manslaughter because the victim was
protesting, is about one thing: chilling protest,”
Rowland said.
Growing tension
between government officials and protesters is expected
to come to a culmination on Inauguration Day in D.C.,
where there will already be many barriers in place to
limit demonstrations.
First and
foremost is the Federal Grounds and Buildings
Improvement Act of 2011, known as
H.R 347.
H.R.-347 is a
revision of a 1971 federal trespassing law that made it
a crime to “willfully and knowingly” remain in an area
under Secret Security protection. H.R. 347 removes the
word “willingly,” a legal technicality that effectively
lowers the bar on the mental state required to be found
guilty under the law.
As explained by
the
American Civil Liberties Union:
“Under the
original language of the law, you had to act ‘willfully
and knowingly’ when committing the crime. In short, you
had to know your conduct was illegal. Under H.R. 347,
you will simply need to act ‘knowingly,’ which here
would mean that you know you’re in a restricted area,
but not necessarily that you’re committing a crime.”
Under current
federal law, protesting in proximity to an elected
official under the protection of the Secret Service,
which includes President Trump, is a crime punishable by
fine and up to ten years in jail.
Protesting
during Trump’s inauguration comes with additional
complications as the National Park Service
reserves a large portion of the inaugural parade
route along Pennsylvania Ave and in Freedom Plaza for
ticket sales under the exclusive discretion of Trump’s
Presidential Inaugural Committee (PIC). This means
the PIC can refuse to allow protesters along the route.
An activist
group called Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (Answer)
has been engaged in a legal
battle with the National Park Service since 2005,
arguing the privatization of the Inauguration is an
attempt to
“sanitize” the streets of dissent.
While the
National Park Service has been controversially setting
aside tickets for the PIC
since 1980, the issue garnered more attention this
year when it was discovered that the sidewalk in front
of the Trump International Hotel, a significant site for
protesters, would be a part of PIC’s ticket-only area.
Adding another
level of bureaucracy, the Washington Post
reported the hotel and plaza in front are actually
under the control of Trump’s real estate agency, meaning
protesters would have to literally ‘ask permission’ to
remain in the space.
As the week
comes to an end, it becomes apparent that dissent is
being criminalized not only nationwide but on multiple
fronts. Increased regulations are appearing that limit
the public spaces that can be lawfully occupied in
protest. Meanwhile, legislation is also being introduced
to increase the negative consequences for newly unlawful
protests. Should more states follow suit with Indiana,
demonstrators will soon find themselves paradoxically
protesting for their right to protest at all.
The views
expressed in this article are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
Information Clearing House. |