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Antifa throws smoke and projectiles at police at Portland rallies; 7 arrested

September 11, 2017 by  
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Antifa demonstrators hurled smoke and projectiles at police officers during rallies in downtown Portland on Sunday, injuring at least two, according to police.

The Rally and March Against White Nationalism, which was organized by the Portland Stands United Against Hate group, started off at a park on the waterfront with speakers leading demonstrators in song and prayers, Fox 12 reported

WARNING: VIDEO CONTAINS PROFANITY 

After police changed the planned route of the march to avoid violence, tensions built up between the demonstrators and an opposing group, Patriot Prayer, also scheduled to hold a rally.

Police said demonstrators threw projectiles and smoke bomb — and knocked down a fence that police had put up. They also said seven suspects were in custody.

Patriot Prayer leader Joey Gibson originally planned to hold a larger rally in Portland but it was moved to nearby Vancouver, Wash., to try and keep it safe and family-friendly, according to Fox 12.

Patriot Prayer bills itself as a peaceful First Amendment advocacy group that appears in locations where there have been past confrontations over free speech.

Gibson told Fox News their rallies are rooted in “a philosophy about promoting love and peace but doing it in a way that’s respectful. It’s about building bridges.”

Antifa members, Fox News previously reported, have over the last year increasingly made their violent presence known at progressive demonstrations and counter-protests to alt-right groups and speakers across the country — leaving critics to question Antifa’s role in the leftist protest movement and to ask if the group is causing more harm than good.

Antifa, short for anti-fascist, traces its roots back to militant anti-fascists operating in Nazi Germany during the 1930s. The emergence of these modern groups in the United States — which are comprised predominantly of radical anarchists and focus more on fighting far-right ideology than on encouraging pro-left policies — coincided with a rise of white nationalists following the election of Barack Obama in 2008, analysts said.

Since the election of President Trump, Antifa activists have become even more active, fighting with right-wing activists and police in cities from Philadelphia to Houston to Hamburg, site of this year’s G-20 summit.

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Trump Monitors Hurricane as His Cabinet Descends on Camp David

September 10, 2017 by  
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President Trump with the first lady, Melania Trump, on their way to Camp David on Friday.

Credit
Al Drago for The New York Times

WASHINGTON — President Trump monitored the impact of Hurricane Irma from the presidential retreat at Camp David on Saturday as he held the fourth full cabinet meeting of his presidency to discuss how to advance his administration’s priorities during the balance of his first year in office.

Aides said Mr. Trump would receive hurricane briefings throughout the day as the powerful storm marched toward the southern tip of Florida, forcing millions of residents to flee the impending surge of water and brutally strong winds.

“With gratitude for our first responders, and prayers for those in the storm’s path, America stands united — and I mean totally united,” Mr. Trump said in his weekly address, which was released Friday evening.

White House officials did not allow journalists to photograph the cabinet meeting or to ask the president questions. Instead, the White House released official photographs showing Mr. Trump and his cabinet members sitting around a conference room table on Saturday afternoon in what it said was a briefing on the “track and potential impact” of the hurricane.

One picture indicated that Mr. Trump and his advisers were praying. Other pictures showed the president, dressed in a navy suit, white shirt and striped tie, having a discussion.

Later in the evening, the White House released a nearly five-minute YouTube video of Mr. Trump speaking to his cabinet members at the beginning of the meeting.

President Trump’s Remarks at Camp David Cabinet Meeting – Sept. 9, 2017 Video by The White House

Reading from prepared remarks, Mr. Trump said that “all of America grieves” for those who have already lost their lives from Hurricane Irma, and he urged people in Florida to heed the directions offered by state and local authorities.

“This is a storm of enormous destructive power. I ask everyone in the storm path to heed all instructions. Get out of its way,” he said, adding: “Property is replaceable, but lives are not, and safety has to come first. Don’t worry about it. Just get out of its way.”

Mr. Trump said that he planned to discuss other topics with his cabinet as well, including what he called “the latest provocative and destabilizing actions of North Korea” and the need for an overhaul of the nation’s tax code.

He said the tax effort would seek to lower rates and bring back capital parked by businesses overseas because of high business tax rates in the United States. He said that would amount to “in the neighborhood of 4 to 5 trillion” dollars.

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Mr. Trump is scheduled to return to the White House on Sunday afternoon. Officials said that Mr. Trump would receive a teleconference briefing on the hurricane at 10 a.m. before he returned to Washington.

On Friday, administration officials expressed confidence that the Federal Emergency Management Agency had the resources to respond to Hurricane Irma even as it continues to deal with the aftermath of the flooding in Texas and Louisiana from Hurricane Harvey.

“I’m pretty comfortable in our ability and our capacity as leaders, but also as institutions to handle the various different things that come our way,” said Thomas P. Bossert, the president’s Homeland Security adviser.

In his address, Mr. Trump pledged that “we will endure and come back stronger than ever before.” But in a tweet later Friday night, Mr. Trump raised concerns with a longstanding policy that prevents FEMA from providing grants to houses of worship that are damaged by hurricanes and other natural disasters.

Three Texas churches that were damaged by Hurricane Harvey filed a lawsuit this past week arguing that the policy violates their constitutional right to freely exercise their religion. FEMA’s position for years has been that the constitutional separation of church and state prevents the use of federal money to build religious institutions.

White House officials said the president had invited all of the members of his cabinet, and their spouses, to Camp David for the weekend.

Among the agenda items for the cabinet meeting, officials said, was a discussion of Mr. Trump’s push for new investments in infrastructure and his call for Congress to extend protections for the young undocumented immigrants known as “Dreamers.”

“The goal is that Congress makes a permanent fix and that Congress actually does their job, and that we have responsible immigration reform that takes place over these six months,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said on Friday.

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