PORTLAND, Ore. — Members of the right-wing Proud Boys and their supporters arrived in a Portland, Oregon, park Saturday as leftist activists prepared their own counterrallies, raising the temperature of a city already on edge as officials pleaded for the ralliers to refrain from violence.
Gov. Kate Brown declared a state of emergency in advance of the arrival of the Proud Boys, an all-male group whose members — many of whom support President Donald Trump — often engage in provocations, threats or fighting with opponents at their events. Brown’s declaration cleared the way for a major law enforcement presence in hopes of keeping the dueling groups apart, but there were fears that people traveling to the park with violent intentions would nonetheless find a way to sow chaos.
Downtown Portland has been rocked by protests this summer, first over the police killings of Black people and later over the Trump administration’s move to send federal agents to the city in an attempt to quell the demonstrations. And demonstrations across the United States kicked up again this week after a grand jury in Kentucky decided not to indict either of the two Louisville police officers who shot Breonna Taylor, a Black emergency room technician, in her own apartment.
Protesters in Louisville faced off with police again Friday, with police firing flash-bang grenades and arresting 22 people; more protests were planned for Saturday. In New York, hundreds of demonstrators held a sit-in for more than an hour on the Brooklyn Bridge, where many took a knee in honor of Taylor. People also took to the streets in Oakland, California; Seattle; Boston; and Albuquerque, New Mexico, where a motorist reportedly tried to drive a car through the crowd, though no one was reported injured.
In Philadelphia on Saturday, dozens of Proud Boys marched through downtown city streets, followed by police officers on bikes. Some carried American flags and Trump 2020 flags while chanting derogatory comments about antifa, videos on social media showed. Some onlookers heckled them, mocking their appearance and clothing.
In Portland, the Proud Boys have described the event Saturday in the city’s Delta Park as a rally to “end domestic terrorism” that they say is being carried out in Portland and other cities by left-wing demonstrators, including supporters of antifa, the loose group of activists who sometimes use violence to stop people from promoting views they deem fascist or racist.
But many in Portland saw it as a thinly veiled excuse by the right-wing group to brawl with their ideological opposites. Among the roughly 200 Proud Boys members who were gathered Saturday, hours before the main event, some were carrying guns. Others had bulletproof vests and other tactical gear.
“The pattern of these particular groups is clear: to intimidate, instigate and inflame,” Brown said Friday.
A coalition of left-wing groups gathered for a demonstration in an area of the city known as Vanport, just down the street from the Proud Boys event, and officials worried that members of the two groups could try to confront one another. State police have promised a “massive influx” of troopers to keep them apart. Another event promoted by Portland residents — promising crafts and other activities — was also getting underway downtown, miles from Delta Park.
Alex Sundine, a member of Black Unity PDX, an activist group in Portland, said the organizers of the counterrally, which began assembling Saturday about a half-mile away from the Proud Boys demonstration, planned to focus on their own event and ignore any efforts by the Proud Boys members to engage them.
Among other things, organizers there said they would discuss the history of the Vanport neighborhood, a former home to many Black shipbuilders who were kept out of Portland by discriminatory housing practices. The city was destroyed when the Columbia River flooded it in 1948, and part of it was later turned into Delta Park, the site the Proud Boys members chose for their rally.
“It’s a history lesson almost to make people aware of what that land was and what it means — and a reminder of how our society treats Black people,” Sundine said.
Even as he publicly condemned anyone hoping for violence, Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the Proud Boys, acknowledged in an interview Friday that skirmishes were possible, if not likely.
“I’d be stupid to say that I don’t expect someone to come in with some type of nefarious motives,” he said, pledging to report any such person to police.
Earlier in the month, Tarrio posted online that “antifa is in for a bad time” if law enforcement was not present for the event.
The group has strongly criticized Mayor Ted Wheeler of Portland for not taking a stronger line against the protesters who clashed with agents outside of a federal courthouse downtown in nightly confrontations over several weeks. The Proud Boys welcomed Brown’s emergency order, which also allowed state and local police to use tear gas, which the mayor had banned city police officers from using.
In a statement this week, Wheeler, a Democrat, said he feared the arrival of Saturday’s demonstrators more than the ongoing demonstrations against racial injustice in his city.
“I categorically condemn violence of all kinds by all people,” Wheeler said in a statement. “But let me be clear: The alt-right and white supremacist groups organizing to come to Portland on Saturday present the greatest threat we’ve faced so far.”
The Proud Boys have held similar events, including last summer in Portland and Washington, D.C., both of which included violent skirmishes.