'Our worst nightmare': Will militias heed Trump's
call to watch the polls?
The far right
With the US dangerously divided, experts fear the
president’s remarks will inspire armed factions to show up at polling places
Ed
Pilkington
@edpilkington
Fri 9 Oct
2020 10.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/09/us-militias-trump-election-day-covid-guns
In the
final minutes of last week’s televised presidential debate, a few days before
he tested positive for Covid-19, Donald Trump was asked by the moderator, Chris
Wallace, whether he would call on his supporters to stay calm and desist from
civil unrest in the immediate aftermath of next month’s election.
Trump
pointedly declined the invitation. Instead, he replied: “I’m urging my
supporters to go into the polls and watch very carefully, because that’s what
has to happen. I’m urging them to do it.”
For those
who monitor the activities of far-right militia groups and white-supremacist
paramilitaries, Trump’s remarks were as welcome as jet fuel being used to quell
a wildfire. Indeed, since they were made the FBI launched a series of arrests
of militia members and others plotting to kidnap the Michigan governor,
Gretchen Whitmer, and attack law enforcement, adding to a sense of a nation
spiraling out of control as November’s election approaches.
“The militias will absolutely seize on [Trump’s
comments],” said Steven Gardiner, who tracks militias at the progressive
thinktank Political Research Associates. “The possibility of armed factions
with military-style rifles showing up at polling places is very troubling.”
Devin Burghart, the director of the anti-bigotry
organization the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights, had a
similar sinking sensation when he heard Trump’s words. “My first thought was
‘Here we go’. This is the stuff of our worst nightmares.”
The US
president’s clarion call to his supporters to intervene at polling places on
election day comes at a perilous moment. As the country is battered by the
combined winds of the pandemic and Trump’s personal battle against the virus,
the Black Lives Matter reckoning over racial injustice, and the pending
turbulent election, the US is not only more virulently divided than at any time
in decades, it is also more heavily armed.
FBI
background checks – a direct indicator of gun sales – almost doubled
year-on-year this summer, a reflection of the jitters that abound. As America
arms itself, deadly weaponry is increasingly finding its way on to the streets,
borne by self-styled private militias and culminating in violent clashes that
have caused bloodshed in several US cities.
With the
most ferociously-contested presidential election in modern times now less than
a month away, there are signs that heavily-armed militia groups, many of them
finely attuned to Trump’s every whim, are setting their sights on the ballot.
“A number
of groups have begun talking about mobilizations on election day and beyond.
We’re hearing initial chatter about preparations for 3 November and we’re
paying close attention,” Burghart said.
Burghart’s
research group has been tracking the escalation of militia activity especially
in key swing states. In Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin in particular,
groups have been detected discussing what they call “voter integrity” efforts
on polling day.
“We
anticipate that after Trump’s call to arms at last week’s debate we’ll see a
lot more activity from here,” Burghart said.
In Montana,
a popular base for libertarians and militia members, there are similar signs of
militia groups assiduously retweeting Trump’s falsehoods about mail-in voting
fraud, circulating the lies widely among themselves.
In the
closed social media groups and chatrooms where more detailed conversations can
be held away from public oversight, far-right ideologues are going several
steps further than merely repeating Trump’s conspiracy theories. They are
attaching them to familiar antisemitic and racist tropes.
One popular
line in Montana is that the billionaire philanthropist George Soros, who is
Jewish, is using his fortune to encourage liberal voters to cast their ballots
multiple times.
Rachel
Carroll Rivas, the co-director of the Montana Human Rights Network, which
monitors extremist networks in the state, said they were picking up
intensifying conversation among militia groups about the legitimacy of the 3
November ballot and of the integrity of mail-in voting. “This really is top
down – they are repeating word for word what they hear from President Trump.”
In addition
to the Soros lie, Rivas said, militia groups such as the Montana branch of the
United States Freedom Protectors were positioning themselves to be vigilante
outriders of law enforcement on election day. Though their planning is as yet
relatively unformed, Rivas said, the possibility of interventions by armed
members of the group had to be taken seriously.
“They
present themselves as protectors of property and law and order, and are now
starting to talk about the election. They may show up at polling places
claiming to want to protect voting rights, but their impact will clearly be
intimidatory,” she said.
Putting a
figure on the scale of the threat posed by extremist militia groups in the US
is fraught given their secretive communications online. The New York Times has
estimated there are up to 20,000 active militia members in about 300 groups,
with a quarter consisting of military veterans.
The pool of
Americans with some militia engagement might extend much wider than that. An
investigation by the Atlantic into the Oath Keepers, one of the most prominent
groups, revealed a leaked database of almost 25,000 current or past members,
two-thirds of whom were from military or law enforcement backgrounds.
Whatever
the numbers, white-supremacist militia groups in America have grown in recent
years to the point where they pose the prime domestic terrorism threat, even
while the Trump administration has tried to play down the danger. Earlier this
month a whistleblower complained that officials of the Department of Homeland
Security had been instructed by superiors to alter intelligence reports to make
the peril appear less severe.
It’s even
harder to put a figure on how much Trump has emboldened the militia, though the
encouragement he has given is beyond doubt. Not only has he consistently
refused to condemn the groups, as he did with the Proud Boys at last week’s TV
debate, but he has maintained a steady dialogue with them through social media.
The
relationship between the militias and the current administration is call and response
Steven Gardiner
“The
relationship between the militias and the current administration is call and
response – it’s not always clear who’s leading the chant. Sometimes it’s coming
from the militias, sometimes it’s coming from the president,” Gardiner said.
It’s not
just the rightwing paramilitaries that pose a mounting danger. Anti-fascist and
radical left groups have shown a growing recourse to guns too, as was seen with
the shooting by a self-styled anti-fascist activist, later himself killed by
police, of a member of the pro-Trump group Patriot Prayer in Portland last
month.
African
American armed militia activity is also back to a level of open defiance that
hasn’t been seen since the “cop-watching patrols” of the Black Panthers in the
1970s. The NFAC (Not Fucking Around Coalition) has staged several actions by
its military veteran members, dressed all in black and wielding semi-automatic
rifles.
On 4 July
the coalition staged a parade of about 1,000 NFAC “troops” in Stone Mountain,
Georgia, the birthplace of the modern Ku Klux Klan. The group’s leader, Grand
Master Jay, told Channel 4 News this month that the goal of the militia was
“the protection of the black race, the policing of the black race, the
education of weapons of the black race”.
The arming
of African American and anti-fascist factions has contributed to the volatility
of the times. But the overwhelming bulk of militia activity falls firmly on the
other side of the country’s widening racial divide – with the overwhelmingly
white far-right.
The summer
saw the proliferation of incidents across the states of far-right militia
groups confronting Black Lives Matter protesters. Gardiner’s team at Political
Research Associates has carried out as yet unpublished research that records
almost 600 such appearances of small but frighteningly well-armed bands of
Trump supporters and far-right extremists.
A troubling
aspect of Gardiner’s findings is that since the late summer there has been a
gradual rise in militia events ending in violence. “The number of serious
incidents of outright violence, shootings, vehicular assaults or menacing with
a pointed gun is on the up,” he said.
An even
more sobering observation is that by far the largest subset of these militia
events, comprising at least 40% of the almost 600 recorded total, were
uncoordinated, with no known involvement of the Oath Keepers, Three Percenters,
Proud Boys, or any other established group.
That means
that there have been almost 240 incidents where small and entirely leaderless
bands of extremists coalesced online and then proceeded to take their armed
fantasies on to the streets of America. One expert on domestic terrorism has
likened the phenomenon to “online flash mobs”.
Take the
chain of events that led up to the tragic loss of life in Kenosha, Wisconsin,
on 25 August. Two days previously, protests broke out in the city after a video
captured Jacob Blake, an African American man, being shot in the back and
paralyzed by a police officer.
On the
night of 25 August, several armed individuals formed themselves into a militia
on the streets of Kenosha to act as a vigilante counter-point to the
anti-police brutality demonstrators whom they denounced as leftist “thugs”. The
unrest culminated with a 17-year-old member of the group, Kyle Rittenhouse,
allegedly shooting at protesters, killing two and injuring a third.
An
investigation by the Atlantic Council’s digital forensic research lab traced
the gelling of the militia back to its online roots. They discovered that 13
hours before the shootings a notice calling on people to gather on the streets
of Kenosha was placed on the existing Facebook page of a local militia calling
itself the “Kenosha Guard”.
A second
invitation to assemble was put out via a separate Facebook group that popped up
that same day having been created by an individual with no known militia
affiliation. He called the page, “STAND UP KENOSHA!!!! TONIGHT WE COME
TOGETHER”.
Significantly,
it was the spontaneous and impromptu group, Stand Up Kenosha, and not the
already established Kenosha Guard militia, that appeared to have the greatest
impact – both in terms of the virulence of the violent threats that it posted
on Facebook and in the responses it received.
Andy
Carvin, a senior fellow at Atlantic Council, said that the finding was
surprising, and disturbing. “Stand Up Kenosha played a much more dangerous and
potentially volatile role that could have led to even more violence. This is
the stuff that now keeps me up at night: these spontaneous groups that have
found a way of attracting individuals who have no prior militia affiliations of
any sort.”
The paradox
is that under both federal and state laws, militias should have long ago been
prohibited. Mary McCord, the legal director of the Institute for Constitutional
Advocacy and Protection, said that the legal status of the groups is crystal
clear – they are unlawful.
“There is
nothing in the law that allows private individuals to self-deploy and engage in
military or law enforcement-type activities,” she said.
At a
federal level, US supreme court rulings in 1886 and 2008 have unambiguously
stated that the second amendment right to bear arms is irrelevant when it comes
to banning private paramilitary organizations. At state level, all 50 states
have provisions in their constitutions or in statute that outlaw militia
activity unless it is at the express orders of the governor.
“This is
actually not a grey area at all, you rarely have laws that are so definitive,”
McCord said. “It is only because of a lack of understanding that these militias
even exist.”
In the
final weeks of the election, McCord and her colleagues have been scrambling to
distribute fact sheets to all states that point to the laws prohibiting private
militias and advise what to do should armed groups turn up at polling places.
She is hoping to arm local law enforcement and voters with legal information so
that they can push back on extremists armed with AK-47 style weapons.
It’s a
daunting task, made none the easier by Trump. “When he talks about ‘poll
watching’ and fraud, and refuses to urge his followers not to engage in civil
unrest, that’s a thinly-veiled dog-whistle for armed groups to coalesce.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário