The Daily - The Showdown in Portland
Episode Date: July 23, 2020This episode contains strong language. Federal agents dressed in camouflage and tactical gear have taken to the streets of Portland, Ore., unleashing tear gas, bloodying protesters and pulling some pe...ople into unmarked vans. Today, we go behind protest lines to ask why militarized federal authorities are being deployed to an American city. Guests: Zolan Kanno-Youngs, The New York Times’s homeland security correspondent, and Mike Baker, a Pacific Northwest correspondent for The Times.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: The federal authorities said they would bring order to Portland, after weeks of protests. But local leaders believe the federal presence is making things worse, and a backlash has grown since the deployment began.Protesters have used everyday home items, including pool noodles, to try to fight the militarized force. This is what our reporter saw on the streets of Portland.
Transcript
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This is Mike Baker, a correspondent for the New York Times, based in the Northwest.
It's 2 a.m. right now. I'm in downtown Portland, watching through some clouds of tear gas.
There's a group of protesters right now.
You can feel the tear gas.
I am watching here through clouds of tear gas a group of protesters moving down Main Street. They've got their umbrellas out to protect themselves.
to protect themselves. And just down the street, there's a line of federal officers. They're
firing tear gas down at the crowd. The officers are standing in a long line down the city block
protecting the federal courthouse.
From the New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, inside the volatile situation in Portland, Oregon, and why federal forces are being deployed to American cities.
It's Thursday, July 23rd.
Zolan Kano-Youngs, you covered the Department of Homeland Security for The Times, the entire
universe of federal law enforcement.
So where does the story of what's happening right now in Portland, where does it start?
So I think we have to go back to late May.
In late May, as we know, there were protests sweeping throughout the country, mass demonstrations.
A majority of those protests involved people who were demonstrating peacefully.
of those protests involved people who were demonstrating peacefully. But you did also have instances of people damaging property, looting, as well as acts of violence. And in
Oakland, you had a situation where an officer with the Federal Protective Service, an arm of
the Department of Homeland Security, who was guarding a federal courthouse, was actually shot
and killed. I should say that the person who shot and killed him
was actually affiliated with a fringe anti-government movement
and wasn't affiliated with the protests.
But that killing did prompt a rare press conference.
The Department of Homeland Security's highest priority
is to ensure the safety and security of the American people
and the department's workforce. From the top senior officials from the Department of Homeland Security's highest priority is to ensure the safety and security of the American people and the department's workforce.
From the top senior officials from the Department of Homeland Security.
Any loss in the DHS family impacts all of us.
And I want the loved ones of these brave officers to know that you have the support of the department behind you.
They go out there and, of course, they honor the memory of this officer, but they also have a message.
There are currently threats by
some to attack police stations and federal buildings. That violence not only won't be
tolerated, we are also committed to ensuring that it won't succeed anywhere, anywhere.
And let me be clear. They make it clear that they are going to take action
against anybody that makes a threat or has any sort of action against federal property.
The acting deputy secretary, Kenneth Cuccinelli, even says.
That is an act of domestic terrorism. That would be an act of domestic terrorism.
Thank you very much.
And so why is that phrase significant, domestic terrorism?
The reason why this is significant is you have to remember how this department was created.
In the wake of the September 11th attacks, this department was formed in the Bush administration
to have a coordinated effort in the federal government to defend the United States against national security threats.
Directly at that time, foreign terrorism threats.
This was a department that was going to protect the borders of the United States.
And this signaled that the top officials in that department were turning their attention inward domestically to these protests that are sweeping
major cities. So what happens after this news conference, which from what you're describing
feels like more of a statement than a set of actions? Right. I think at that point, it's a
message. The message is we're not going to tolerate this, right? It's clear. But then things start to move pretty fast.
Within two days, on June 1st, we start to see that the department is going to back up this rhetoric with the concrete action of federal resources.
I remember early in the day, you know, I got a message from a source who sent me an alert that all Homeland Security Investigation special agents around the Washington, D.C. area got. And it said, you have to be on standby for any potential unrest later today around the area of Lafayette Park.
So that day, you know, later on, that's where you saw the images of Secret Service, DEA, National Guard, Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well.
And of course, it was many of those same federal officials and agents who were stationed outside of Lafayette Park and would clear out protesters to make room for the president's photo op.
So we're now seeing the message delivered at that news conference put into action on the streets of Washington.
That's right. And I mean, if you listen to the senior officials with the Department of Homeland Security,
as well as other officials in the Trump administration, they would say, look, this federal presence was needed in Washington.
Our agents in front of the White House were being threatened.
And they would also say, well, look, after about a week,
the unrest calmed down.
So from their perspective, as controversial as some of these actions were and as intimidating and unusual as it felt on the ground,
this was working.
That's right. That's right. It worked.
Their deployment worked, if you were to ask them.
So what happens next?
Okay, so over the next few weeks,
what really happened is we saw a shift.
A tense standoff with police
as protesters tried to tear down a statue of former President Andrew Jackson.
— Now we're starting to see protesters and demonstrators honing in and focusing on statues and memorials.
— We're addressing white supremacy, finally.
And it's just something that we grew up with, and it's just been so normalized that the people on our money would have owned me.
Targeting those statues and memorials, sometimes pulling them down, sometimes defacing them.
And you also saw a pretty prompt reaction by the federal government.
They're bad people. They don't love our country. And they're not taking down our monuments.
So in late June,
I will have an executive order very shortly.
The president then signs an executive order.
The gist of it pretty much says
that the attorney general,
as well as the acting secretary of Homeland Security,
should direct their resources
to defend statues and monuments and federal property.
Just a couple days later, the Department of Homeland Security then forms a task force,
what's known as these rapid deployment teams.
Those teams involve 2,000 officers and agents that are on standby,
involve 2,000 officers and agents that are on standby,
from air marshals with the TSA to tactical agents with Customs and Border Protection to special agents with ICE, ready on standby to be deployed throughout the U.S.
And how unusual is this kind of rapid deployment that you're describing?
Well, I mean, actually, the department, when it was formed, and many former officials with the department would say this as well, that flexibility to be able to move different officials around is an advantage, right?
It was actually an intention as well to be able to have these different agencies support one another. But it's the mission here, deploying them for monuments and statues,
the appearance of these teams
in front of the National Mall and Gettysburg.
That's where many observers,
as well as some of the architects of the department,
raised an eyebrow at this.
Why?
This country is grappling
with a couple different national emergencies right now.
The Department of Homeland Security also has a huge stake in the response to the pandemic.
We have an election coming up as well.
The department is the agency tasked with cybersecurity.
So it was a question over priorities.
But for the department, it really comes down to this.
Are any of these people in these crowds committing the federal crime of defacing federal property? sees it as his job to deploy if there is any mere violation of that federal law, whether it be
graffiti on a property or some of the more violent acts that we've seen in these demonstrations.
And it's that rationale that the department used, you know, that weekend, the weekend of July 4th, to start deploying these teams to different cities, but primarily to Portland.
We'll be right back.
Mike Baker, I just spoke with our colleague, Zolan, who explained how this has all unfolded in Washington over the past few weeks.
But you are actually on the ground in Portland.
So help us understand what it has looked like there during that same period.
You know, it began with a similar sort of scene that we saw around the country.
We matter!
We all matter!
Black lives matter!
around the country. We matter! We all matter!
Black lives matter!
The mass peaceful demonstrations.
George Floyd!
Dance in!
George Floyd!
Dance in!
George Floyd!
Thousands of people on the streets.
There are really powerful images here in Portland
of crowds covering the entire Burnside Bridge
over the Willamette River, you know, in honor of George Floyd.
And at the same time, you've got what we saw in a lot of cities.
Windows shattered, graffiti everywhere.
Smashing windows of businesses.
There's a Verizon store, the Nike community store,
Starbucks got hit.
The first night of protests, they broke into the Justice Center and lit fires.
But what's really been different here is the persistence of it.
We're now more than 50 consecutive days into the protests happening every night.
Wow, 50 days, like nonstop?
Nonstop every night. Wow, 50 days, like non-stop? Non-stop, every night.
And what have these nightly confrontations in Portland looked like?
You know, it's all over the place. You know, in some of these confrontations,
many of which you can see in videos online, you know, you can see these standoffs between protesters and police where, you know,
some protesters will throw water bottles or fireworks.
Videos of them breaking windows at buildings downtown
or setting up barricades in the streets.
downtown are setting up barricades in the streets.
Police claim they've had bricks thrown at them, rocks thrown at them.
There have been videos surfacing online of people shooting guns in the air.
One group set a fire in the headquarters of the police union, the local police union.
And throughout much of this time, they made it really their nightly routine to gather downtown right next to the federal courthouse.
This is the Orland Police Bureau. This is a civil disturbance and we have declared an unlawful assembly.
Leave the area now or you'll be subject to use of force to include crowd control munitions. Leave now. Police kept coming out, arresting a number of people.
And responding with so much tear gas that some of these protesters went to court, sued, and won a judge's order limiting how much this gas could get used. Never seen or covered anything like this. The damage and just the impact in the statement
being made is unprecedented. It's crazy to see. It's just been a persistent issue that they
haven't really been able to resolve. And who are the people who were involved in these nightly encounters, as best you can tell?
It's a group with a, you know, a wide range of backgrounds, ideologies, strategies, tactics that they've brought.
You know, Portland has a history of anarchist groups, and you can see some of the anarchist symbols on the streets.
see some of the anarchist symbols on the streets. You know, you see a lot of people wearing all black clothing, which is pretty common for those who are part of the Antifa group. And then you
have people who are part of the Black Lives Matter movement chanting the name of George Floyd. And
just, and so you really have this huge mix. Mike, in your time in Portland, I imagine you're
talking to people in the city about this ongoing problem. What are people you've talked to in Portland saying about the situation?
message of the protesters, the need for police reform and the need for resolving racial injustices.
At the same time, those same people are frustrated by what seems like a line of protests that won't seem to end. Business people I talk to who have had their windows boarded up and shortened their
hours for safety reasons. And one of them I talked to is considering, like,
maybe it's time to just get out of here
because there doesn't seem to be a resolution ahead.
We are physically and emotionally in pain.
I have officers that are injured.
From police, you hear them saying, essentially,
that they're out of ideas.
We love our community.
We want to serve our community and facilitate free speech.
Saying that they're exhausted and in pain, and they're trying to show that they're part of the community too, that they aren't some sort of outside force that's here.
We're at a loss for other solutions right now, and I'm open, that the police don't quite know how to resolve these nightly encounters.
And these nightly encounters are still happening.
And so is there some sense of resignation that this is just kind of how it is going to be for a while?
Yeah, I mean, there's certainly no deadline that was going to be coming up. There's a hope that things were on a better track,
that the numbers that were coming out each night were starting to shrink a little bit,
and that they might be on a pathway to finishing this. And that's when deployment of federal
officers arrived in town. So what happens when those federal officials start showing up and at the
direction of the Department of Homeland Security? Well, I mean, right away, you can see that they're
standing out. I mean, they've shown up here in camouflage, fatigues and tactical gear. So just
visually, it's pretty clear that there's an outside force that has now arrived. And they've come with a pretty aggressive posture.
And what do these aggressive tactics from the federal forces there look like?
Well, some of it just, you know, in the streets you can see a return to a large amount of tear gas
because, you know, these federal officers were not under the same mandates as local police.
But then there were also tactics that you could see coming out in different videos.
In the first one, you have this protester standing across the street from the federal courthouse.
He's got a boombox over his head and he's just cursing at the officers across the street.
All of a sudden you see him drop to the ground.
to the ground.
He's apparently been shot with some sort of less lethal
munition and really
just created a bloody scene
right there on the street.
Blood all over the sidewalk
and his family says he's had to go
to the hospital for more than a week.
In these other videos,
you have these protesters
on the streets of Portland. hospital for more than a week. In these other videos, you have these protesters. What is going on? Who are you?
On the streets of Portland and federal officers again in camouflage and tactical gear,
approaching them, grabbing them, and then pulling them back to unmarked vans.
You just violated their rights.
Filled with officers in tactical gear.
What are you doing?
And what is the response to these videos?
I mean, you've got outrage from not just the protesters, but from the same city officials that have been the target of the protesters all along.
The tactics that the Trump administration are using on the streets of Portland are abhorrent.
People are being literally scooped off the street into unmarked vans, rental cars, apparently.
The mayor has been villain number one for a lot of these protesters as someone who has failed to
reform the police department in the ways they want. And yet here you have him. It's not helping
the situation at all.
They're not wanted here. We haven't asked them here.
In fact, we want them to leave.
Ask the federal officers to leave his city.
He doesn't want them here. He doesn't want them on the streets.
And what they're doing is they are sharply escalating the situation.
Their presence here is actually leading to more violence and more vandalism.
And you have the cycle here of tear gas, things being thrown back and forth.
Standoffs where protesters are holding umbrellas and shields made out of pool noodles and plywood and the officers standing on the other side and in their full tactical gear and helmets and gas
masks and a scene of two sides and not much pathway to a resolution in the space between.
So as of now, it feels like the very thing the federal government is in Portland to try
to tamp down is actually escalating in response.
I mean, it's been a significant escalation.
I mean, now we're seeing thousands of people out there. You have people out there coming out for the first time.
So what was your motivation for coming out?
I have five grandkids and three daughters,
and I don't want to be at the end of my life and say that.
I didn't do anything to make them have a better future.
I caught up with this grandmother from Eugene, Oregon,
who was there and had come up to Portland for the first time.
I told her family that she planned to stay on the outskirts to be safe.
And then while she was there, she was motivated to keep moving up.
And I caught up with her again, and she was right at the front of the federal courthouse.
She's a little uneasy watching this unfold
doesn't necessarily agree with the tactics she's watching but she's staying there she
feels the need that this is a moment to stand up to do something and she needs to be there.
So Mike Baker said that the federal presence in Portland has basically made things worse, not better.
And it has really created a kind of violent feedback loop between the protesters and these federal officers.
And I wonder what you think about that.
Well, I mean, whether you listen to the demonstrators,
the local officials there,
or the senior officials with the Department of Homeland Security,
it's clear everyone agrees
that the federal presence thus far has not succeeded
in terms of bringing an end to the violence that we're seeing,
the unrest that we're seeing at this time. So by that measure, the goal has not been accomplished.
But there is also a question here, you know, for the Trump administration,
is that solely their measure of success? Is this solely about bringing an end to this unrest?
You know, optics do matter.
And the optics of having agents and camouflage gear and tactical teams in a city led by Democrats, that does send a message.
led by Democrats, that does send a message.
The radical left-wing mob's agenda, take over our cities.
And just a couple days ago, the president's re-election campaign actually issued a campaign ad.
And Joe Biden stands with them.
With images that look a lot like that area around the federal courthouse in Portland,
displaying images of unrest and individual acts of violence.
Violent crime exploding. Innocent children fatally shot.
Who will be there to answer the call when your children aren't safe?
And at the very end of that ad, they actually lay it out in pretty direct terms.
Text that reads, you won't be safe in Joe Biden's America.
I'm Donald J. Trump, and I approve this message.
You're actually seeing the White House kind of double down.
I can tell you in Portland, they've done a fantastic job.
And say, well, look, they're doing a great job in Portland. In fact, we're not going to let New York and Chicago and Philadelphia and Detroit and Baltimore
and all of these, Oakland is a mess.
We're not going to let this happen in our country.
All run by liberal Democrats.
Some of these other cities led by Democrats could use the same kind of deployment.
This is worse than Afghanistan, by far.
This is worse than anything anyone's ever seen.
All run by the same liberal Democrats.
And you know what?
If Biden got in, that would be true for the country.
The whole country would go to hell.
And we're not gonna let it go to hell.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
So, Zolan, where does this leave us at this point?
So, it leaves us in this precarious position. We know that on the ground in Portland, the presence of federal agents and those officers has increased tension.
But to the president,
he'd like to see a similar presence in other cities.
Zolan, thank you very much.
Thanks for having me here.
On Wednesday, President Trump announced that he would immediately dispatch federal law enforcement officers to Chicago. The FBI, ATF, DEA, U.S. Marshals Service, and Homeland Security will together be sending hundreds of skilled law enforcement officers to Chicago to help drive down violent crime. In Chicago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she would not tolerate the kind of federal deployment that has played out in Portland.
What we saw the president and the attorney general do in Portland is a travesty.
And we are not having it in Chicago.
A few hours later, Portland's mayor, Ted Wheeler, joined protesters in the streets there.
He was quickly tear gassed by federal agents.
He said, without provocation.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to nerdy.
It's essential that we wear masks statewide in Ohio to contain the spread of this virus.
So therefore, tomorrow at six o'clock tomorrow night, our mask order for people who are out in public will be extended throughout the state of Ohio.
As the daily death toll from the coronavirus again surpasses 1,000 Americans a day,
governors in three more states issued orders requiring masks.
Ohio, Indiana, and Minnesota.
The wearing of the mask plus the social distancing makes a huge, huge difference.
The orders came a day after President Trump, who has long resisted wearing masks
and at times even disparaged them, made his most forceful call yet for wearing them.
And.
No city president has ever done this.
Never, never, never.
No Republican president has done this.
No Democratic president.
We have racists, and they've existed,
they've tried to get elected president.
He's the first one that has.
During a campaign event on Wednesday,
the presumptive Democratic nominee, Joe Biden,
called President Trump
the first racist to be elected president.
The way he deals with people based on the color of their skin, their national origin, where they're from, is absolutely sickening.
In response, historians noted that previous presidents owned enslaved people and were openly racist.
And during a news conference, Trump rejected Biden's characterization.
Would you like to respond to Joe Biden, who today described you, you might have heard that, as the first racist to be elected president?
Those are his, those are his words.
I've done things that nobody else, and I've said this, and I say it openly, and not a lot of people dispute it.
I've done more for black Americans than anybody with the possible exception of Abraham Lincoln.
Nobody has even been close.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.