-First Amendment - United States Constitution
Trump rallies are public events. If someone wants to counter the message being spread at these events without disrupting them, the first amendment gives them the right to do so. Unfortunately, there are numerous examples where this has not been the case as Trump marches towards becoming the Republican nominee. For example, in January, "a muslim woman wearing a hijab was escorted out of Donald Trump's campaign event...by police after she stood up in silent protest during Trump's speech." In February, "about 30 black students who were standing silently at the top of the bleachers at Donald Trump's rally here Monday night were escorted out by security officials before the presidential candidate began speaking." In Chicago, the candidate had not even taken the stage, so it is clear that none of the protesters were guilty of interrupting him.
There have been those who have taken their actions further by engaging in civil disobedience and actively disrupted Trump's speeches. Protest is also a form of speech and should not be impinged on by the government. While law enforcement does have the right to remove these protestors from the event, they also have an obligation to prevent them from being harmed. Trump fan John McGraw should have been immediately arrested after he sucker punched a protester. White supremacist Matthew Heimbach and Korean War veteran Alvin Bamberger have both publicly acknowledged assaulting a protester but have yet to be held legally accountable for their actions. This purposeful inaction by law enforcement serves to impede speech by encouraging violence against protesters and should not be tolerated in a democratic society.
Last summer, Trump called Bernie Sanders "weak" for giving up the microphone when confronted by Black Lives Matter protesters and vowed that he would never let this happen at his rallies by saying "I don't know if I'll do the fighting myself, or if other people will, but that was a disgrace." His fans have followed his lead, but when confronted with an actual reality, the reality star caved and cancelled his rally rather than confront those who disagree with his vision for America. When a protester got too close to the stage at an Ohio rally, the self-proclaimed alpha male did not confront him directly; he cowered behind his Secret Service detail\. The Wizard has been exposed behind the curtain, but it remains doubtful that his fans will stop clicking their heels in belief that he can "make America great again."
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I am a candidate for the District 2 seat on the LAUSD School Board, founder of Change The LAUSD and member of the Northridge East Neighborhood Council. Opinions are my own.