Thousands
of Americans backed by rightwing donors gear up for
protests
Conservative activists to demand governors lift
stay-home orders – and movement has been driven by
wealthy conservative groups
By Adam Gabbatt
April 19, 2020
"Information
Clearing House"
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Conservative activists are demanding governors lift
orders designed to stop the spread of the coronavirus,
despite the recommendations of public health officials.
Trump, who has clashed with Democratic governors over
how soon to reopen the US economy,
tweeted his support on
Friday, in an unprecedented endorsement of civil
disobedience by a sitting president.
Yet while
organisers claim the protests are grassroots- and
people-driven, a closer look reveals a movement driven
by traditional rightwing groups, including one funded by
the family of Trump’s education secretary, Betsy DeVos.
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The rallies have drawn comparisons to the Tea
Party movement, which sprang into life in 2009
following the election of Barack Obama and was
driven in part by Americans for Prosperity, a
group founded by
rightwing donors Charles and David Koch.
As with
the Tea Party, the anti-stay-at-home movement has been
promoted by a rightwing media eager for the economy to
reopen, including Fox News which on Friday aired a
segment on protests in Virginia, Michigan and Minnesota.
Two minutes later,
Trump tweeted to his
77.4 million followers the need to “liberate” those
states.
A
majority of Americans support the lockdowns, with
a Pew Research Center poll
finding that 66% are concerned state governments will
lift restrictions on public activity too quickly. But
protests, helped by media coverage, have spread around
the country.
The two
groups behind the “operation gridlock” rally in
Michigan on Wednesday
have ties to the Republican party and the Trump
administration.
The
Michigan Freedom Fund,
which said it was a
co-host of the rally, has
received more than $500,000
from the DeVos family, regular donors to rightwing
groups.
The other
host, the Michigan Conservative Coalition, was
founded by Matt Maddock,
now a Republican member of the state house of
representatives. The MCC also operates under the name
Michigan Trump Republicans, and in January
held an event featuring
several members of the Trump campaign.
“Absolutely the Michigan event was a huge inspiration
and it was a huge success,” said Evie Harris, organizer
of a ReOpen
Maryland protest
planned for the state capitol on Saturday.
“That was the
model for our event.”
Thousands drove
to the Michigan state capitol in Lansing, while the
Michigan Freedom Fund purchased Facebook advertising to
promote the rally. Protesters, many waving Trump
campaign signs, honked their horns and chanted for
Governor Gretchen Whitmer to end the stay-at-home rules.
The protest was
covered exhaustively by the rightwing media. Harris said
her Facebook following grew from “700-800 people” to
more than 15,000 members following the Michigan rally,
inspiring her to organize “Operation Gridlock Annapolis”
for Saturday.
Harris said her
group had support from some elected officials in
Maryland, but declined to name them.
While ReOpen
Maryland might not have funding from rightwing advocacy
groups, it appears to be linked to at least four other
“reopen” organizations.
“Government
mandating sick people to stay home is called
quarantine,” ReOpen Maryland said. “However, the
government mandating healthy citizens to stay home,
forcing businesses and churches to close is called
tyranny.”
That text is
identical to text on Facebook pages calling for rallies
in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Virginia. ReOpen Virginia
aims to hold its own “gridlock” rally on Wednesday –
again inspired by the conservative-funded Michigan
event.
Despite
ReOpen Virginia
billing itself as a
“grassroots group of people and small business owners”,
founder Kristen Lynne Hall said the idea for the protest
came from the organizers of the “Lobby Day”
demonstration earlier this year.
Hall, who
said Candace Owens, a rightwing activist and
favorite of Trump, had
been in touch to discuss the event, said the president’s
tweet about “liberating”
Virginia was “great”.
“It could be
spreading the movement,” she said. “Any support is
appreciated right now.”
A decade
ago, the Tea Party movement billed itself as “grass
roots”, despite receiving money from the Koch-backed
Americans for Prosperity
and the conservative organization
FreedomWorks.
Jenny
Beth Martin, who founded the Tea Party Patriots group,
promoted this week’s
Michigan protest.
The Tea Party Patriots also supported
the protest, in messages to its 200,000 Twitter
followers.
Matthew Gertz,
a senior fellow at Media Matters for America, a
progressive media watchdog, said the similarities
between the Tea Party and ReOpen movements went further,
with rightwing media boosting both.
Fox News
ran favorable coverage of the Michigan rally and hosts
including
Laura Ingraham and
Jeanine Pirro endorsed
the protest.
“Fox gave the
Tea Party a phenomenal amount of attention and
promotion,” Gertz said. “It really sort of boot-strapped
it to another level, and made it a political force, and
we see something similar happening with these
anti-stay-at-home order movements.”
Gertz said he
was not “simply” concerned with “the conservatives
having a strong election the next time out”.
“It’s a real
chance for devastating consequences with regard to the
coronavirus,” he said.
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