DC mayor inaugurates ‘Black Lives Matter’ Plaza near White House
DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has feuded with President Trump about militarised responses to protests against police brutality.
Days after security forces in the United States pushed back peaceful protesters with flash grenades and tear gas, Washington, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser on Friday renamed the area in front of the White House “Black Lives Matter Plaza”.
The slogan painted in huge yellow letters on the roadway is in an apparent rebuke of President Donald Trump’s militaristic response to protests against police brutality.
Bowser tweeted footage of the street painting on a section of 16th Street in the US capital with a message to Breonna Taylor, a Black woman killed by police in Louisville, Kentucky, who has inspired nationwide protests along with George Floyd, a Black man who died on May 25 in Minneapolis police custody.
“Breonna Taylor, on your birthday, let us stand with determination,” Bowser wrote. “Determination to make America the land it ought to be.”
Bowser and Trump are at odds over the president’s use of federal law enforcement agencies and military police to break up a protest on Monday night so he could have a photo op outside a church near the White House.
“We want troops from out-of-state, out of Washington, DC,“ Bowser said at a news conference on Thursday.
Breonna Taylor, on your birthday, let us stand with determination.
Determination to make America the land it ought to be. pic.twitter.com/XOfu6CGEGY
— Mayor Muriel Bowser (@MayorBowser) June 5, 2020
Troops leaving
On Friday, a US official said the Pentagon would be sending back the remaining 900 active-duty troops who had been sent to the Washington, DC, area to potentially respond to civil unrest.
The city also installed a street sign for Black Lives Matter Plaza at the intersection of H and 16th Streets, site of the St John’s Episcopal Church where Trump, holding a Bible, stood for his Monday night photo op.
Using rollers and buckets of yellow paint, with brushes to finesse the edges of the letters, a group of people – men and women, of different races and ages, some wearing rollerblades, some work boots – painted the street. Many were sweating under the warm sun.
Trump used Twitter to deliver a barbed response to Bowser.
The incompetent Mayor of Washington, D.C., @MayorBowser, who’s budget is totally out of control and is constantly coming back to us for “handouts”, is now fighting with the National Guard, who saved her from great embarrassment…
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 5, 2020
“The incompetent Mayor of Washington, DC, @MayorBowser, who’s budget is totally out of control and is constantly coming back to us for ‘handouts’, is now fighting with the National Guard, who saved her from great embarrassment … over the last number of nights. If she doesn’t treat these men and women well, then we’ll bring in a different group of men and women!”
‘Dominate the streets’
Trump, buffeted by the economic blow of the coronavirus pandemic and protests, on Friday again said he had advised some state governors to call in the National Guard.
“Don’t be proud. Get the job done. You’ll end up doing much better in the end, calling the National Guard. Call me,” Trump said in remarks at the White House.
“You have to dominate the streets. You can’t let what’s happening, happen,” Trump said, echoing some of his previous remarks.
Nationwide protests, largely peaceful, have at times turned to vandalism, looting and clashes between police and protesters.
The Republican president, running for re-election on November 3 against presumptive Democratic candidate Joe Biden, was cheered on Friday by an unexpected jump in US employment in May.
Millions of Americans have lost jobs while much of the country has been under lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Trump suggested in his remarks that economic recovery would help ease racial tensions.
“What’s happened to our country and what you now see has been happening is the greatest thing that could happen for race relations, for the African American community, for the Asian American, for the Hispanic American community, for women, for everything,” Trump said.
When pressed to outline his plans, Trump said: “Our country is so strong and that’s what my plan is, we’re going to have the strongest economy in the world.”
Trump – accused by critics, including his former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, of dividing the US – called for law enforcement to treat all people fairly and equally, regardless of race, gender, colour or creed.
On Wednesday, after long refusing to explicitly criticise a sitting president, Mattis roundly denounced Trump for militarising the US response to civil unrest.
Protests, which waned overnight, have taken place in many cities, including Atlanta, Denver, Detroit, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York and Washington, DC.
Protests were planned for Washington, DC on Saturday, and memorial services were expected over several days with Floyd’s funeral planned for Tuesday.
A change in mood at most demonstrations reflected a determination voiced by many protesters and organisers to turn outrage over Floyd’s death into a renewed civil rights movement, seeking reforms to the US criminal justice system.
Despite the improvement overall in Friday’s jobs report, unemployment among African Americans was higher in May than in April, a statistic that critics were certain to cite as underscoring racial disparities in the American society.
The unemployment rate for African Americans is 3.5 percentage points higher than the national rate of 13.3 percent, while the rate for whites is 12.4 percent, nearly a full point below the national rate.