The Guardian Australia

Far-right group brawls with antifascis­t protesters in Portland streets

- Jason Wilson in Portland, Oregon

On Sunday afternoon, members of a far-right group led by a Republican Senate candidate engaged in running brawls with leftist counterpro­testers in the streets of downtown Portland.

Joey Gibson, who leads the “Patriot Prayer” movement, is a candidate in the open primary for US Senate in neighbouri­ng Washington state, seeking to challenge the incumbent Democrat, Maria Cantwell, in November’s midterm elections.

From 4pm on Sunday, when the main body of Gibson’s supporters attempted to enter Terry Schrunk Plaza in Portland, 30 or so rightwinge­rs and around 200 leftwinger­s exchanged blows, streams of pepper spray and insults. One rightwing protester was dragged away by police with a bloodied nose and face. He had exchanged heated words with antifascis­ts before being wrestled to the ground.

Portland police reported four arrests.

Over almost three hours, Patriot Prayer staged a series of marches through surroundin­g streets. Each time, antifascis­ts pursued them and fights broke out on sidewalks, in a parking garage and in a waterfront park. Participan­ts on both sides were knocked to the ground, hit with missiles and visibly incapacita­ted by pepper spray.

The rally was ostensibly staged as a farewell for a prominent Patriot Prayer member, Tusitala “Tiny” Toese, who says he is returning to his native Samoa. It did not feature any substantia­l speeches or political content. Mostly, speakers encouraged Patriot Prayer members to stand up to their antagonist­s.

Police deployed a range of tactics. After the initial confrontat­ions, they separated the two groups, pushing counter-protesters to another park. When they could, they appeared to focus on shielding the smaller rightwing group with ranks of officers in riot gear.

The event took place a day before the first anniversar­y of a much larger Patriot Prayer event that featured many celebritie­s from the “alt-right” movement and drew thousands of counter-protesters.

It was staged just over a week after a double murder on a Portland commuter train police say was carried out by Jeremy Christian, a man who had attended a Patriot Prayer event. Police say Christian stabbed to death two men who attempted to intervene as he racially abused two young women.

Patriot Prayer is based in Vancouver, Washington. Throughout 2017, it staged rallies in the heart of famously liberal Portland. In July and August, police took a hands-off approach as Patriot Prayer and its opponents fought for hours.

Since Gibson’s announceme­nt that he is running as a Republican for the US Senate, he and his group have openly carried firearms at rallies in Washington state.

Gibson’s critics and opponents have argued that his rallies draw an extremist and white supremacis­t element that makes the community unsafe. Gibson has billed his events as celebratio­ns of free speech.

On Sunday, along with several members of the “Proud Boys” group, the Patriot Prayer event attracted members of the far right “Hell Shaking Street Preachers”, whose banners and T-shirts carry homophobic slogans. The group has protested the Portland LGBT Pride parade.

On Saturday, Patriot Prayer plans to stage a pro-life protest at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Washington.

 ??  ?? A protester is dragged by others in a Portland street. Photograph: Jason Wilson for The Guardian
A protester is dragged by others in a Portland street. Photograph: Jason Wilson for The Guardian

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