Pro-gun demonstration set for Virginia capital in wake of Capitol siege
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[January 18, 2021]
By Julia Harte and Julio-Cesar Chavez
RICHMOND, Va (Reuters) - Gun rights
activists will converge on the Virginia state capital on Monday for an
annual demonstration that falls at an especially tense time this year,
after the Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol and two days before the
presidential inauguration.
"Lobby Day" has authorities on alert in Richmond, about 110 miles (175
km) south of Washington, D.C., where Democratic President-elect Joe
Biden will be sworn in on Wednesday, replacing Republican President
Donald Trump.
Lobby Day takes place in a highly polarized climate, following a year in
which anti-racist and white nationalist demonstrators clashed across the
United States, and as strident Trump supporters cling to hope he can
remain in power.
Nationwide pro-Trump demonstrations scheduled for Sunday largely fizzled
after the FBI issued warnings and several states deployed the National
Guard.
"We're showing up to remind them that we're still here," a gun rights
activist, who identified himself only as Trevor, told Reuters outside
the Virginia statehouse on Sunday evening, walking the perimeter to help
plan the protest.
Virginians traditionally petition their lawmakers on Lobby Day at the
start of the state's General Assembly session, with the pro-gun Virginia
Citizens Defense League taking a leading role in recent years.
Other groups including the anti-government "boogaloo" movement will
attend Monday, as could liberal demonstrators. Lobby Day always falls on
Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a national holiday honoring the civil rights
leader assassinated in 1968.
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Law enforcement officers patrol on the grounds of Virginia State
Capitol, days ahead of President-elect Joe Biden inauguration, in
Richmond, Virginia, U.S. January 17, 2021. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
Boogaloo boys also walked the perimeter of the statehouse on Sunday,
striking poses with semiautomatic rifles for photographers.
Philip Van Cleave, leader of the defense league, said demonstrators
would come from as far away as New York and Texas. The group says it
plans to petition state lawmakers to loosen gun curbs, as it has
done during many Lobby Days in the past.
"We've been doing this for 25 years," Van Cleve added. "We've never
had a single problem. No arrests, nothing."
Police estimated last year's crowd at 22,000.
(Reporting by Julia Harte, Julio-Cesar Chavez and Ned Parker;
Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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