Hundreds of thousands of people descended on the nation's capital and cities across the country this weekend in continued demonstrations protesting George Floyd's death at the hands of Minneapolis police.
The protests were largely peaceful, and their meaning has extended beyond Floyd's fate to the larger issue of policing in America and police treatment of black Americans.
"Don't let the life of George Floyd be in vain," a county sheriff said at a memorial service for Floyd Saturday in North Carolina.
Floyd will be remembered Monday in Houston at a public memorial service followed by an invitation-only funeral service Tuesday. Former Vice President Joe Biden will fly to Houston and meet with Floyd's family Monday and deliver a videotaped message at the funeral service (though he won't attend it because of complications his Secret Service detail would create).
President Trump, on the other hand, won't be attending. He will be in Washington instead, and, on Monday, hosting a roundtable with law enforcement at the White House.
The two actions couldn't better sum up where the two men on the ballot this November to lead the country are coming from — and the bets they're making to win.
Trump has taken a hard "law and order" line, thinking that will appeal to suburban whites. CBS reported over the weekend that after demonstrations turned violent last weekend, the president wanted 10,000 active-duty military personnel on the streets.
And while he's praised Floyd and been critical of police action in Minneapolis that killed the 46-year-old black man, Trump has also sounded off key.
"Hopefully George is looking down right now and saying this is a great thing that's happening for our country," Trump said Friday of Floyd while touting the latest jobs report that sent stocks soaring. "This is a great day for him. It's a great day for everybody."
Two other actions prompted pushback: Trump's walk last Monday to a church, part of which was burned, across from the White House came after law enforcement forcibly removed peaceful protesters; and the president threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act and use the military if governors didn't deploy National Guard troops to quell the protests. Both moves caused controversy — and breaks with multiple, high-profile current and former military officials.
What's more, survey data show his view of the country may be outdated. A
new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll
Polls have also shown more people disapproving of the president's handling of the coronavirus, and an
NBC/WSJ poll
Trump is suffering politically, losing ground with key groups and losing to Biden in head-to-head matchups. He's down 7 in both the NPR poll, 50% to 43%, and the NBC/WSJ poll, 49% to 42%. (In 2016, Clinton led in the NBC/WSJ poll at this time by just 2 points.)
There are still five months to go until the presidential election. This could be the nadir for Trump politically and most political strategists are girding for and expect a close election, but the president has a hole to climb out of right now if he hopes to be reelected.
5 things to watch
1. Protests and the president: The weekend largely saw peaceful, multi-ethnic protests around the country. Do people continue to go out to the streets in the same numbers? Do the protests die down? On Monday, Trump holds a roundtable with law enforcement at the White House. Does he continue to take a hard-line, given most people said they don't agree with him on his view of the demonstrators?
2. Race and justice take spotlight on Capitol Hill: On Monday, House Democrats will unveil police reform legislation led by Congressional Black Caucus, and on Wednesday, a House committee holds a hearing on racial profiling and policing. Notably, these are Democratic-led initiatives. Will there be Republicans who join in to press for changes in policing? After all, bipartisan efforts are what led to criminal justice reform legislation in 2018.
3. What about coronavirus? With the masses of people in the streets, it's easy to forget that much of the country was locked down because of an airborne, viral respiratory pandemic. The U.S. has now crossed 110,000 deaths from the coronavirus. Many front-line workers, doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers are torn on the protests and what they could mean for a resurgence of the coronavirus. The
New York Times
4. Watching the Supreme Court: The high court is set to release orders and opinions on Monday. The big topics to watch for are on LGBTQ rights and DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program started during the Obama administration. The LGBTQ case is an employment discrimination one. On the DACA case, when the case was argued in the fall, the court's conservative majority
appeared ready to go along
5. Trump heads to West Point; coronavirus evident there: Trump is slated to give the commencement address at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point Saturday. But 16 cadets and 71 faculty, staff or civilians at the campus have reported positive for COVID-19.
USA Today
Quote of the weekend
"By the way, there was no tear gas used [Monday]. The tear gas was used Sunday when they had to clear H Street to allow the fire department to come in to save St. John's Church. That's when tear gas was used. ... No, there were not chemical irritants. Pepper spray is not a chemical irritant. It's not chemical."
--Attorney General William Barr on
CBS Face the Nation
While Park Police say they didn't use "tear gas," a local reporter
collected spent cans of tear gas
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