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Trump supports right wind armed protestors who stormed Michigan Capitol building

Saturday, May 2nd 2020 - 06:37 UTC
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“The Governor of Michigan should give a little, and put out the fire,” Trump tweeted. “These are very good people, but they are angry” “The Governor of Michigan should give a little, and put out the fire,” Trump tweeted. “These are very good people, but they are angry”
“They want their lives back again, safely! See them, talk to them, make a deal.” However the president did not explain what he meant by “a deal.” “They want their lives back again, safely! See them, talk to them, make a deal.” However the president did not explain what he meant by “a deal.”

President Trump threw his support behind armed right-wing protesters who entered the Michigan Capitol shouting and blocked the office of Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, claiming that they are “very good people, but they are angry.”

“The Governor of Michigan should give a little, and put out the fire,” Trump tweeted. “These are very good people, but they are angry. They want their lives back again, safely! See them, talk to them, make a deal.”

The president did not explain what he meant by “a deal.” Whitmer, a Democrat who has become a favorite punching bag for the president, extended the state's social distancing guidance on Thursday through May 15. However, she lifted many of the restrictions which had become a flashpoint for the protests, such as opening travel between primary and second homes and allowing residents to go boating and play golf.

Residents are still required to stay home as much as possible and practice social distancing in public, and non-essential businesses cannot open.

Though smaller than an earlier event known as “Operation Girdlock”, Thursday's protests in Lansing, dubbed the “American Patriot Rally,” were the most confrontational the country has seen yet as armed protesters packing shoulder-to-shoulder into the state capitol and shouting at legislators.

“Some of my colleagues who own bullet proof vests are wearing them,” state senator Dayna Polehanki, a Democrat from Livonia, tweeted.

Demonstrators showed up on the sidewalk outside Whitmer's home last week, holding signs and exchanging waves with other protesters honking and shouting at the governor from a passing caravan of trucks, vans and SUVs.

Protesters were joined by David Clarke, the former sheriff of Milwaukee who oversaw a jail where water was kept from a mentally-ill inmate who died of dehydration. The Trump supporter-turned-right-wing provocateur addressed Michigan residents in the rain outside the capitol, encouraging them to “become defiant.”

“How did they come up with this number of 6 feet?” Clarke asked, conflating state restrictions with the Trump administration's own guidance, which expired Friday. “I think they just pulled it out of their rear-ends.”

Once under consideration to head the Department of Homeland Security, Clarke has called for the suspension of habeas corpus to arrest and detain indefinitely up to 1 million Americans he believes to be terrorist sympathizers in Guantanamo Bay prison.

The Washington Post and The New York Times have reported that some of the groups behind the shutdown protests are funded by right-wing organizations and conservative mega-donors, including massive Facebook groups run by zero-tolerance gun right activists. Facebook deleted the protest's event page, citing company policy about violating social distancing mandates.

On the capitol building's lower level, protesters demanded to access the floor of the legislature, shouting things like: “let us in” and “you cannot lock us out —this is the people's house.” Some accused capitol police, who were taking temperatures per state guidelines, of being “redcoats.”

Michigan has been one of the US states most impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. The state now has more than 35,000 cases of COVID-19 with nearly 3,000 deaths, according to data from John Hopkins University.

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