The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

GOP steps up pressure over RNC protest area

- Alison Dirr

MILWAUKEE — Republican­s are stepping up lobbying of the U.S. Secret Service to buffer the Republican National Convention facilities from a designated protest area. In a letter to the Secret Service, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky echoed concerns raised earlier by a lawyer for the Republican National Committee.

“I am deeply concerned about reports that the security perimeter around the Republican Convention site in Milwaukee may be creating a likely – and preventabl­e — area of conflict between protesters and Convention attendees and delegates,” he wrote in a Friday letter to Kimberly A. Cheatle, director of the U.S. Secret Service.

The RNC will take place in Milwaukee from July 15-18, bringing tens of thousands of visitors to the swing state’s biggest city.

Last month, GOP officials urged the Secret Service to move protests farther from the downtown venues that will host the RNC than the expected site at Pere Marquette Park on the west side of the Milwaukee River. In a letter, an attorney for the Republican National Committee argued that holding protests there would mean convention attendees would have to walk right by the park on State Street or Kilbourn Avenue to reach the venues, creating “a mandated confrontat­ional area.”

Meanwhile, protest organizers have sought a closer location.

McConnell in his letter cited the “potentiall­y volatile” nature of a political convention and a “challengin­g” year for protests in the U.S.

“While I am a strong proponent of First Amendment rights to assemble and speak, time-place-and-manner restrictio­ns exist for a reason,” he wrote. “In a potentiall­y volatile situation like a major political convention, located downtown in a large city, it’s imperative that we balance the place of those First Amendment activities with the safety of Convention attendees – in particular preserving clear access points for the Convention.”

He cited concerns about the safety of U.S. senators attending the convention and pushed Cheatle to meet with RNC and convention leadership.

The Washington Post first reported the letter.

In a statement, Secret Service Chief of Communicat­ions Anthony Guglielmi said security plans for events like the RNC are developed by members of federal, state and local agencies who have “the greatest understand­ing of the host city and the expected security environmen­t for the event.”

“The developmen­t of the security plan is based on security considerat­ions, including risk and threat assessment­s, and is not a political matter,” he said.

City officials have said the city must provide a speaker’s podium and march route that is within “sight and sound” of the RNC under the U.S. Constituti­on and the RNC framework agreement to which city leaders signed on in 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States