Monday, August 21, 2017

Bannon Was Set for a Graceful Exit. Then Came Charlottesville.

Stephen K. Bannon in the Oval Office earlier this year.
Bannon Was Set for a Graceful Exit. Then Came Charlottesville.

THE NEW YORK TIMES
JEREMY W. PETERS and
MAGGIE HABERMAN
AUG. 20, 2017


WASHINGTON — John F. Kelly, the new White House chief of staff, told Stephen K. Bannon in late July that he needed to go: No need for it to get messy, Mr. Kelly told Mr. Bannon, according to several people with firsthand knowledge of the exchange. The two worked out a mutually amicable departure date for mid-August, with President Trump’s blessing.

But as Mr. Trump struggled last week to contain a growing public furor over his response to a deadly, race-fueled melee in Virginia, Mr. Bannon clashed with Mr. Kelly over how the president should respond. Give no ground to your critics, Mr. Bannon urged the president, with characteristic truculence.

At the same time, New York real estate investor friends told Mr. Trump that the situation with Mr. Bannon was untenable: Steve Roth on Monday, Tom Barrack on Tuesday and Richard LeFrak on Wednesday.

By Thursday, after Mr. Bannon undercut American policy toward North Korea in an interview published by a left-leaning magazine, Mr. Trump himself had concluded that Mr. Bannon was too much of a liability.

By Friday, when he was forced from his job as Mr. Trump’s chief strategist, Mr. Bannon had found himself wholly isolated inside a White House where he once operated with such autonomy that he reported only to the president himself. Read more
______________________________________________________________________

Mayor Mike Signer spoke at the Charlottesville meeting
Melee Breaks Out at Charlottesville City Council Meeting

THE NEW YORK TIMES
By FRANCES ROBLES
AUG. 21, 2017


CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — A melee broke out at the Charlottesville City Council meeting on Monday night, as activists and residents angrily took over the Council chambers and criticized the city’s response to a white supremacist gathering here that left a local woman dead.

It was the Council’s first meeting since the Aug. 11 and 12 rallies that brought hundreds of white supremacists to Charlottesville. White and black residents alike were furious with the police response to the demonstrations, and they faulted officers for not engaging during repeated scuffles. A woman, Heather D. Heyer, was killed when a man drove into counterprotesters.

The meeting started out without incident, but soon several residents began shouting down city officials for allowing the Aug. 12 "Unite the Right" rally to take place. When police officers forcibly removed three people from the Council meeting, the 100 or so people at the meeting broke out into furious chants, screaming "Shame" and "Shut it down!" The three people were issued summonses charging them with disorderly conduct. No injuries were reported.

"I’m outraged!" said Tracy Saxon, 41. "I watched my people get beat and murdered. They let Nazis in here have freedom of speech and they protect them? And we can’t have freedom of speech?"

Two people stood on the dais and unfurled a banner with the words "Blood on your hands!" as council members and the mayor left the room. The residents refused to cede order of the room until the authorities promised to release the residents who had been taken away and let people have their say.

Councilman Wes Bellamy, the only African-American on the Council, was the only member of the council who remained. He negotiated with residents to restore order to the room in exchange for the regular agenda being scrapped and each person getting one minute to speak.

One 35-year resident, Gail Weatherall, called for a citizen-led review of the weekend’s events and the city’s response.

Several speakers criticized the Council for not having heeded warnings to avoid the protest, and promised to vote them out of office. But city officials stressed that they had tried to deny the white supremacist rally, but that a federal court had ruled in the protest organizers’ favor.

"We tried really hard," Mayor Mike Signer said after the meeting resumed and other Council members returned.

"A federal judge forced us to have that rally downtown." Read more

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.