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No Kings: Protesters line Park Avenue West in rally against President Trump

No Kings: Protesters line Park Avenue West in rally against President Trump

Yahoo11 hours ago

Gerald Vega might not have had much of a voice left after Saturday's "No Kings" protest on Park Avenue West.
The 20-year-old president of the Richland County Young Democrats used a bullhorn to rally the crowd of about 250, who braved a rainy forecast to make their voices heard.
"We're out here protesting what we believe to be the petty dictatorship and tyranny of President Donald Trump," Vega said. "We need to get our voices out there and say, 'This is not acceptable. We need change.'''
The protests in Mansfield, Shelby and Ashland were part of a nationwide movement, coinciding with Trump's military parade in Washington, D.C.
Their goal was to raise questions about the balance of power between the federal government and state and local authorities, as well as the rights of immigrants.
More: 'No Kings' protests updates: Rallies wind down in Philadelphia, Los Angeles and DC
With a wet forecast, not many people were at the Mansfield protest at the beginning, but the crowd continued to swell as the rain largely held off outside of a fine mist.
"I'm pleased with the turnout with the weather," said Venita Shoulders, vice chairwoman of the Richland County Democratic Party's executive committee. "I was thinking, 'Oh, no,' but the people seem to want to be here regardless."
The county Democratic Party, along with Democracy Speaks: Richland County, organized the protest. Shoulders spent much of her time directing people where to park as protesters lined the sidewalks in front of the Kroger complex and Taco Bell and across the street at the West Park Shopping Center property.
"We want to be part of the bigger picture in terms of what's going on across the nation," Shoulders said.
Vega has been politically active for about three years. He said his generation cares about the future. "Young people are very passionate," Vega said. "It's just about mobilizing them."
As the protest got underway, a woman handed out small American flags to those attending.
Lynn Vera lives in Fostoria and is camping in the area. Mansfield was the closest protest, so she decided to come. Her husband dropped her off.
"He doesn't agree with me, not enough to step out of his comfort zone," Vera said. "It takes a lot to step out and tell people you don't agree with the administration's policies."
Though she is a Democrat, Vera said she votes for the person, not the party. She did not vote for Trump either time.
"He promotes lies. He promotes hate," Vera said. "By calling in the National Guard (in Los Angeles), I think he's trying to get us into martial law."
Many of the protesters brought signs. Larry Foster's read, "The power of the people is greater than the people in power."
Foster, who lives in Mansfield, said he disagrees with the mass deportation of immigrants, especially those who have been sent to prisons.
He said immigrants play a key role in the United States with their work in the farming and textile industries, adding some have lived here for decades.
"They're pulling them out of the fields," Foster said. "Who's going to pick the vegetables?"
Like Foster, Dan Marion sympathizes with immigrants.
"I don't have a problem with immigration (reform). I have a problem with how we're doing it," the Ashland man said.
Marion said Trump needs to be held accountable.
"I see an overreaching government that doesn't want to follow the Constitution," he said.
The protest in Mansfield ran from 10 a.m. to noon, in part to minimize conflict with the downtown Juneteenth event.
"We didn't want to disrupt our good friends at the Juneteenth celebration," Vega said.
While many people honked their horns in support while driving past the protesters, not everyone agreed with them. One person in a black pickup drove past twice, gunning his engine and spewing black exhaust on the crowd.
Another driver slowed down while someone in the backseat held a sign out the window reading "Trump 2024 Save America."
The sign was met with a resounding chorus of boos.
John Makley organized a similar protest in Shelby. He said people were "vile" with their postings on Facebook, but that generated more interest.
Makley estimated about 70 people turned out for the protest at the Black Fork Commons.
"For Shelby, that's pretty amazing," he said.
The president of the Shelby Area Democratic Club, Makley also attended the protest in Mansfield.
"I've never been a Trump supporter," he said, citing the president's cuts to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and food banks, along with his stance on climate change.
Makley added that Trump's military parade "took money away from people who need support."
"At least, in (Trump's) first administration, there were people who were concerned about repercussions and did believe in the law," he said. "This is not the America I grew up seeing."
mcaudill@gannett.com
419-521-7219
X: @MarkCau32059251
This article originally appeared on Mansfield News Journal: Protesters take to the streets to rally against President Trump

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Live Updates: Manhunt for Minnesota Assassin Enters 2nd Day as State Mourns Victims
Live Updates: Manhunt for Minnesota Assassin Enters 2nd Day as State Mourns Victims

New York Times

time7 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Live Updates: Manhunt for Minnesota Assassin Enters 2nd Day as State Mourns Victims

The police have said that the suspect in Saturday's attacks, Vance Boelter, 57, disguised himself as a police officer before going to the homes of two state lawmakers in the Minneapolis suburbs. The man suspected of shooting two Democratic state lawmakers in Minnesota early on Saturday had served on a state board with one of the victims, records show. The suspect identified by the authorities, Vance Boelter, 57, was appointed several times by Minnesota governors to the Workforce Development Board, where he served with State Senator John A. Hoffman, who was shot and survived. Mr. Boelter and Senator Hoffman attended a virtual meeting together in 2022 for a discussion about the job market in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic, minutes from the meeting show. Drew Evans, the superintendent of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, said investigators did not yet know how well the two knew each other, if at all. Mr. Boelter was appointed to the board in 2016 by Mark Dayton, a Democrat who was then the governor. More recently, he was appointed by Gov. Tim Walz, also a Democrat. The board has 41 members who are appointed by the governor, and its goal is to improve business development in the state. A state report in 2016 listed Mr. Boelter's political affiliation as 'none or other,' and another report in 2020 listed him as having 'no party preference.' Voters do not declare political affiliation when they register in Minnesota. The police have said that the suspect in the attacks disguised himself as a police officer and went to the homes of two state lawmakers in the Minneapolis suburbs. He shot and wounded Senator Hoffman, and his wife, Yvette, and fatally shot State Representative Melissa Hortman, and her husband, Mark. He remains on the run. 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Legal immigrant sees small business boom after opening doors to police injured during anti-ICE riots
Legal immigrant sees small business boom after opening doors to police injured during anti-ICE riots

Fox News

time22 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Legal immigrant sees small business boom after opening doors to police injured during anti-ICE riots

LOS ANGELES – A restaurant owner outside Los Angeles is opening up about her decision to help police officers who were tear-gassed during riots outside her business June 7. Elizabeth Mendoza is the owner of La Ceiba Restaurant, a Salvadoran eatery in Long Beach, who told Fox News Digital she welcomed both police and protesters who entered her business seeking help after being pepper-sprayed that Saturday afternoon. "I feel sad because my city … it's a good city," she said. "My people is honest. My people have to work a lot. I'm here for 14 years. I know my people, and I feel bad … when I saw the police. The police need my help, too, because they are human like me. They feel everything like me. "They have to … work," she said, adding she has received thanks from police for helping officers that day Mendoza initially said her restaurant had suffered because the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids and police presence in the area made people "scared" to walk around. But now her business is thriving due to the positive attention she has received nationally for helping officers. She has been living in the United States for more than 30 years and is a legal U.S. citizen. The business owner said the recent riots and ICE raids have made her "sad" because immigrants like her want "peace" and "work" in the United States. While outsiders have treated what she described as her "hole-in-the-wall" restaurant with respect, Mendoza called on protesters to condemn violence against other local businesses. "Everything is OK. I want to say that protest is good," she said. "But no[t] something bad — the street, the windows. Please, don't do that." Protests escalated in the Los Angeles area beginning June 6 and June 7, when ICE raids began across the county, resulting in hundreds of illegal immigrant arrests. The Department of Homeland Security shared information with Fox News about some of the most violent offenders arrested by ICE those two days. Rioting broke out on the evening of June 7, a Friday, as agitators burned cars, threw objects and fireworks at police, blocked traffic, vandalized public buildings with graffiti and smashed windows of the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters downtown. The rioting continued into the weekend and ensuing weeknights.

Why McCain and Obama are causing marital tension
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CNN

time24 minutes ago

  • CNN

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(LifeWire) -- Pamela Rainey Lawler and Denis Lawler of Philadelphia have handled the travails of being married 38 years without seeing eye to eye on a lot of things. The upcoming presidential election is no different. Pamela, a 58-year-old self-described "left-left" Democrat, will be voting for Barack Obama. Denis, a 60-year-old longtime Republican, plans to vote for John McCain. Although they joke about their situation, Pamela says it's hard to keep her sense of humor when the stakes are so high. Good thing they love each other. "It gets hard when things are getting down and dirty and there is a lot on the line," Pamela, the director of outreach and development at an educational company, says of her husband, a lawyer. But she adds, "The foundation of [our] relationship is so much bigger than politics, and tends to trump politics." Especially in an election season where emotions are running high, couples who don't agree on politics can keep the peace by being open and honest with one another. "Where couples get in trouble is not so much having a different opinion; it's how they communicate it," says Grecia Matthews, a couples therapist and social worker in New York City. Couples need to be honest about their arguing styles and tolerance for criticism, she adds. State your opinion Good communication skills are important, it's true, but as Lorraine Duval knows, it also helps to be married to a good-natured spouse. Duval, a 33-year-old music teacher and McCain disciple from Glens Falls, New York, admits that in the heat of the moment she has called her pro-Obama husband, Chris, by other, less loving names. "Sometimes you have to state your opinion," she says, though she emphasizes that Chris' easygoing nature diffuses the tension. She returns the favor at social gatherings where Republicans far outnumber Democrats. She'll "go off the deep end" in his defense if she feels McCain voters are ganging up on him, says Chris, a 34-year-old mortician. "We really didn't discuss our views until later on in the relationship," Lorraine explains. "It wouldn't have been an issue for me anyway." Besides, points out Andre Anthony Moore, the founder of Marriage and Couples Counseling in New York City, if spouses agreed on everything, "life would be dull." "But in the process of drinking in the other's opinion," he says, "you might get to be a bigger person." Embrace the difference Opinions always got a good airing in the Lawlers' home when she was growing up, says their daughter, Kristin, 37. "At our dinner table, if you couldn't be persuasive, you were toast," says Kristin, an assistant professor of sociology at the College of Mount St. Vincent in Riverdale, New York. But such debate wasn't divisive, it was healthy, she says. Even today, when the family gathers, they debate politics. "I do think that my parents would make a good model for others who vote differently and who are able to see their differences in a positive light," says Kristin. "Difference is a vital principle -- it keeps you on your toes. Having a good opponent makes you a better debater. And if you want your side to win, you have to know how to make a strong political argument." For the record, though, Pamela Lawler says the couple's three children tend to side with her. Agree to disagree "Elizabeth Leslie, 37, a Democrat from Sacramento, California, works hard to maintain the political peace with husband Troy Gassaway, 35, a Republican." "It's exceptionally challenging," she says. "We agree to disagree." Leslie confesses she can't help but try to sway her husband's allegiance -- as communications manager for the nonpartisan League of Women Voters of California, political persuasion is part of her job. Leslie, who was not speaking on behalf of the League, says she has persuaded her husband to vote her way on several proposals in the past two elections. She praised him for listening to her when he's on the fence about any legislation. But come November, he's sticking with McCain. "My advice is for couples to hear the other out," she says. "The passion that made up their mind -- at least consider it." And even if the debate gets ugly, consider the fringe benefits. All that emotion can stimulate friendlier activity, therapist Grecia Matthews points out: "There can be makeup sex." Keeping the peace Live in a house divided? Here are some tips for keeping the peace when you and your partner split the ticket: • If disagreements get too personal, consider keeping sensitive subjects like politics off-limits. • If you need to vent an unpopular opinion, talk with a friend who holds similar values. • Agree on a "safe word" signifying that a tense conversation needs to end, out of respect for one another. • After tensions peak, do an activity you both enjoy -- take a walk or go to the movies -- and remember why you love each other. • Establish firm guidelines on when and where it's OK to bring up the campaign -- if at all. E-mail to a friend LifeWire provides original and syndicated lifestyle content to Web publishers. Ron Dicker, a Brooklyn-based journalist, frequently writes about relationship topics. He previously covered sports for the New York Times. All About U.S. Politics • John McCain • Barack Obama

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