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Democrats ready for action amid campus protests

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As pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ions escalate on college campuses around the country, critics of President Joe Biden‘s handling of the Israel-hamas war suggest this summer’s Democratic National Convention could be hit by protests and scenes of chaos that undermine his reelection campaign.

Already, 65-plus organizati­ons in Chicago and elsewhere have formed a coalition to “March on the DNC” when it opens there on August 19. Activists have sued in federal court, alleging First Amendment violations because the city has only offered permits for demonstrat­ions miles from the United Center, where Biden is scheduled to accept the Democratic presidenti­al nomination.

Protesters preparing for the convention have vowed to march on it anyway, raising the specter of clashes with police that could undercut Biden and further divide the Democratic base. They think the campus demonstrat­ions — and broad Democratic disapprova­l of the war — will fuel their efforts.

Some are suggesting August’s meeting could look like 1968’s Democratic convention in Chicago, where a violent police crackdown on anti-vietnam War protesters created indelible scenes of chaos widely blamed for weakening the eventual party nominee, Hubert Humphrey.

“The DNC is likely to become a flashpoint because these movements are going to continue to escalate,” said Joseph Geevarghes­e, executive director of the progressiv­e activist group Our Revolution. “I can see a replay of 1968, unless the administra­tion does a course correction.”

National Democrats say they’re prepared to keep the convention on track and limit disruption­s.

“There will be people at this convention and it would not be a surprise to any of us if they were quite visible,” said Lavora Barnes, the chair of the Michigan Democratic Party, who added, “I don’t think there’s any weakness in allowing people to exercise their First Amendment free rights to speech.”

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said keeping protesters away from the convention site is about ensuring “optimal safety” while protecting people’s constituti­onal rights. He pushed back on the idea that this summer will resemble 1968.

“I’m not the mayor of the city of Chicago if a generation ago, and a generation before that, did not protest,” said Johnson, a former union organizer who is Black. “I want to assure people that it’s not 1968. I am not the mayor of 1968.”

‘What’s going to change?’

Many campus protesters have focused more on individual universiti­es than on White House policy. Among the common demands is pushing their schools to end investment­s that support Israel’s military.

“We can go to the White House at any given moment (and) scream our lungs out, but what’s going to change?” asked Raf Hawa, 25, a student protester at George Washington University in Washington. “The universiti­es, their goal is to listen and to understand.”

An Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll released in February found that just 31 per cent of US adults approve of Biden’s handling of the conflict, including only 46 per cent of Democrats.

Faayani Aboma Mijana, a spokespers­on for the Coalition to March

nseeds on the DNC, foreshadow­ing between campus unrest and what might unfold in Chicago, though he stressed that its demonstrat­ions will be family friendly. Mijana said national Democrats waiting for emotions to fade once universiti­es break for the summer are misguided.

“People are only growing angrier,” Mijana said, adding, “I think that’s wishful thinking on their part to think this will go away. Our coalition’s not going to let it go away. We’re going to keep pushing.”

Back to Chicago

In 1968, 10,000-plus protesters opposing the Vietnam War and assorted other causes held huge demonstrat­ions near the convention site and throughout Chicago. Police and National Guardsman responded with force prompting clashes that are better remembered than the nomination of Humphrey, who lost to incumbent President Richard Nixon that fall.

Columbia University students that year occupied the same building, Hamilton Hall, that pro-palestinia­n demonstrat­ors briefly occupied in New York before police last week cleared the building and arrested dozens. On Monday, Columbia cancelled its university-wide commenceme­nt scheduled for next week.

However, Sean Wilentz, a Princeton University history professor who was a campus activist at Columbia then and also in Chicago in 1968, noted that the Vietnam War and its draft affected far more Americans than the current conflict in Gaza, and that the assassinat­ions of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy only added to the domestic upheaval.

“The divisions in the country were profound in ’68 in a way they are not now,” said Wilentz, who has advised Biden during his presidency.

Authoritie­s insist they are prepared in ways unimaginab­le in 1968. The convention has been designated as a National Security Special Event which allows officials to enlist the Defense Department as needed. The US Secret Service says that teams have been in Chicago “for months preparing an intricate security plan with the full weight of the federal, state, and city government” and city police are receiving training anticipati­ng large demonstrat­ions.

Congress has also approved US$75 million for to cover security costs for Chicago and Milwaukee, which is hosting the Republican National Convention. Protesters are expected in Milwaukee, though presumptiv­e GOP nominee Donald Trump has not drawn mass protests this year.

And while protests have been a fixture at both parties’ convention­s in recent cycles, the demonstrat­ions haven’t triggered 1968’s bloodshed — including when Democrats returned to Chicago in 1996.

“When the country looks to Chicago this August, the unity and excitement of Democrats will stand in stark contrast to the chaos and extremism stewing in the GOP,” said Matt Hill, a spokespers­on for the Democratic National Convention.

DNC vice chair Ken Martin said that support for Biden remains strong and that some are looking at campus protests and seeing “a much deeper problem than it really is.”

“We have, clearly, difference­s of

opinion within our party on critical issues,” said Martin, who is also head of the Democratic Party in Minnesota. “But dissent and debate are hallmarks of the Democratic Party, and we’re not going to allow those divisions to turn us inward.”

A political problem

Biden has condemned protests turning violent. Top Republican­s, including former President Donald Trump, who is accepting the GOP nomination weeks before Democrats gather, has pointed to instances of antisemiti­c chants and blamed Democratic-led cities for failing to restore order.

The Biden administra­tion is still working to achieve a Gaza ceasefire and for Hamas to release surviving hostages from its October 7 attack, which could undercut the rationale for protests in August.

The White House also has decried antisemiti­sm and sought to assure some American Jews who are worried about their safety and criticized the campus protests. But it has faced significan­t dissent from key constituen­cies — Arab American voters and younger voters who are broadly more sceptical of US support for Israel — that shows no sign of dissipatin­g.

“There is widespread discontent among progressiv­e voters, young people, people of color and the progressiv­e voting bloc writ large, and he needs that in order to win,” said Geevarghes­e, head of activist group Our Revolution.

“I’m not sure if the administra­tion fully recognizes the danger leading into the convention and the optics that could be created.”

 ?? AFP/VNA Photos. ?? IN TENTS PROTEST: Student protesters set up a campsite to express support for Palestine at the campus of Columbia University in New York City, on April 30.
AFP/VNA Photos. IN TENTS PROTEST: Student protesters set up a campsite to express support for Palestine at the campus of Columbia University in New York City, on April 30.
 ?? ?? CITYSCAPE: Chicago, Illinois, where the 2024 Democratic National Convention will be hosted.
CITYSCAPE: Chicago, Illinois, where the 2024 Democratic National Convention will be hosted.
 ?? ?? OLD FOES: The incumbent US President, Joe Biden (left), and former President Donald Trump.
OLD FOES: The incumbent US President, Joe Biden (left), and former President Donald Trump.

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