
Protestors Rush Stage During Charles Koch's Award Speech In D.C.
Protestors briefly disrupted billionaire conservative political donor Charles Koch's award speech at a Washington, D.C., hotel Thursday night, rushing the stage to condemn his influence on climate change.
Charles Koch, CEO of Koch Inc., is shown at The Broadmoor Resort in Colorado Springs in 2019. (AP ... More Photo/David Zalubowski)
Charles Koch, 89, CEO of Koch Inc. and a major Republican donor for decades, was accepting the Cato Institute's Milton Friedman Prize for advancing liberty before several hundred attendees at the Washington Hilton's ballroom.
Several protestors, dressed in cocktail attire similar to attendees, rushed toward the stage midway through Koch's speech.
Protestors shouted 'Charles lied! People died!' and held banners appearing to read 'Billionaires burning the planet' and 'Can't take blood money to hell' before security cleared the stage within a minute.
The closest any protestor got to Koch was about 10 feet.
Koch appeared unhurt and continued his speech after they were removed, saying, 'Now you know all the fun I've been having.'
Spokespeople for Koch and the Cato Institute did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Koch, a billionaire industrialist and longtime funder of libertarian and conservative causes, has spent decades shaping U.S. policy through political donations and think tank support, including the Cato Institute. He's drawn fierce criticism from the left for backing efforts to roll back environmental regulations, oppose campaign finance reform and fight government oversight—positions critics say protect his corporate interests at the public's expense. A video tribute to Koch Thursday night made light of the criticism, with clips of former Treasury Secretary Robert Reich and Sen. Bernie Sanders slamming Koch drawing laughter from the audience.
It's not immediately clear who organized the protest or whether any demonstrators will face charges.
Guests passed through metal detectors and security appeared to be present throughout the venue, but it's unclear how the demonstrators made it past without detection.
'When you have those kind of enemies, you know you are doing the right thing,' Koch said after resuming his remarks, drawing a standing ovation.
The Washington Hilton, where Koch was speaking, is the suite of the 1981 assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan.
Forbes estimates that Koch is worth about $67.5 billion.
Billionaire Charles Koch Shares His Secret Plan To Pass On His Fortune And Influence (Forbes)
Billionaire Charles Koch On Why Cannabis Should Be Legal (Forbes)
Exclusive: Charles Koch Has Given More Than $5 Billion Of His Stock To Two Nonprofits (Forbes)
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