Coronavirus drives U.S. political protest off the streets and into
online forums
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[April 14, 2020]
By Elizabeth Culliford and Makini Brice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - At any other time, a
divisive U.S. president dealing with a national crisis that is causing
severe economic dislocation might bring throngs of demonstrators to the
streets of Washington and state capitals across the country.
But the spread of the novel coronavirus, which had killed more than
23,560 people in the United States and infected 584,293 as of Monday
night and shut down all but essential travel and businesses, has made
physical protests nearly impossible.
Activists representing nurses, flight attendants, civil rights, voting
rights, African Americans, people with chronic illnesses, renters and
multiple other groups are reassembling online, hoping to influence
lawmakers in Congress and officials in the White House.
But their impact may be limited, experts say.
The Poor People's Campaign, which is demanding that the government's
$2.3 trillion coronavirus relief package better serve poor and
low-income people, has converted a planned June 20 march in Washington
into an online gathering on that date.
"What we've got to do is take everything we had planned to do in the
street and do it through social media," the Rev. William Barber, the
campaign co-chair, told Reuters.
"We're going to give a platform to all of these frontline essential
workers who are not being treated like they're essential," he said,
adding the campaign was gathering advice from film producers and other
experts on how to tell stories at the event.
Health Care Voter, which is pushing to preserve the Affordable Care Act,
popularly known as Obamacare, and lower prescription drug costs, had
initially planned to do a bus tour in March and April, stopping in 30
cities from California to Maine.
Instead, it is holding digital events, including a March 31 national
town hall featuring Democratic U.S. House of Representatives Speaker
Nancy Pelosi that received 400,000 views - unprecedented for the group,
campaign director Rosemary Enobakhare said.
"People are at home, honestly, and they want to be able to have these
conversations," said Enobakhare. "People are looking at ways to
interact."
March for Science, a grassroots movement that holds Earth Day rallies
each year, has canceled its April street protests for virtual forums
using videoconferencing app Zoom and Facebook Live to interview experts
about the pandemic and public policy.
Kyle Herrig, president of Accountable.US, said the anti-corruption
watchdog group had shifted much of its work to research the federal
government’s coronavirus bailouts for big business but that it was
challenging to get information out in a news environment dominated by
the coronavirus pandemic.
Color of Change President Rashad Robinson said the civil rights group
was dealing with the rush of news by ramping up spending on Facebook and
Google ads and developing media partnerships.
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Members of the clergy William Barber (C) and Jesse Jackson (L),
standing below a painting of Christopher Columbus landing in the New
World, speak during a Poor People's Campaign rally in the Rotunda at
the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S. May 21, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst/File Photo
HONKING ACTIONS, PETITIONS
While young activists may adapt well to moving their campaigns
online, their efforts may be less effective than actual street
protests, said Dana Fisher, a professor of sociology at the
University of Maryland, whose research focuses on activism.
“Large-scale protest events are opportunities to create collective
identity for the people participating and to extend the
constituency,” Fisher said.
Past in-person rallies against the Trump administration had that aim
in mind rather than hoping the president might look out of the White
House and change his policy, she said.
Some physical protests are still happening, but in new ways.
National Nurses United, which has 185,000 members, is pushing for
Congress to get nurses proper personal protective equipment with a
text campaign and protests at hospitals, said Malinda Markowitz, one
of the presidents of the California Nurses Association affiliate.
"We have to make sure that we just have a very small group of nurses
and they’re 6 feet (1.8 m) apart when they’re out there," she said.
Barbara Suarez Galeano, organizing director for Detention Watch
Network, a coalition of groups working to abolish immigration
detention, said the network had been signing petitions and
performing call-ins and "honking actions." Last week in Chicago,
people drove to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
building, the juvenile prison and finally the county jail, where
more than 150 cars gathered to circle the building.
"There's a lot of ways to be disruptive and still be visible," said
Suarez Galeano.
Petitions urging Whole Foods <AMZN.O> to grant paid leave to
employees and for New York state to bar hospitals from banning
support people in delivery rooms helped create change, activists
say.
"The huge volume of petitions being created right now speaks to the
urgency, concern and anxiety that millions of Americans feel as the
COVID-19 pandemic dominates our day-to-day lives," said Michael
Jones, managing director of campaigns at Change.org.
(Reporting by Makini Brice and Elizabeth Culliford; Writing by
Heather Timmons; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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