Above Photo: More than 70 protesters have been dragged out of the Senate hearing room where Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation hearing is taking place, in the first two days of the proceedings. (Photo: @dcexaminer/Twitter)
“Tireless and creative, rambunctious, confrontational, and peaceful protest is unnerving to him. It is one of many aspects of American life that he, simply, cannot control.”
With his deeply unpopular U.S. Supreme Court nominee, Judge Brett Kavanaugh, facing outraged protests at his confirmation hearing and veteran journalist Bob Woodward’s book about the inner workings of the White House making waves, President Donald Trump launched his latest attacks on the First Amendment on Wednesday.
According to reports from the Daily Beast and Hill Reporter, Trump took aim at protesters like the dozens who were dragged away in handcuffs from Kavanaugh’s hearing on Tuesday and Wednesday. In an Oval Office interview with the conservative Daily Caller on Tuesday, the president was quoted as saying:
I don’t know why they don’t take care of a situation like that…I think it’s embarrassing for the country to allow protesters. You don’t even know what side the protesters are on…In the old days, we used to throw them out. Today, I guess they just keep screaming.
The reports did not indicate what Trump, whose only political position has been as President of the United States, was referring to by “the old days” when “we used to throw them out,” but as a presidential candidate in 2016, he made a habit of ordering the removal of protesters from his rallies—as well as encouraging his supporters to violently attack them.
Trump’s comments – strongly suggesting the in-session Kavanaugh protests should be illegal is a pattern to hatred for protests and evidence that strong confrontational protest is effective. So keep it up! 1/x https://t.co/Xo11AaSoW7
— Aaron Walker (@sturgidson) September 5, 2018
Deep history of Trump stating how much he hates anti-Trump protest, including his inauguration, the Women’s Marches & airport protests, the blimp in UK, and, of course, CK’s sports kneeling protests (themselves protesting in solidarity w OTHER protests, primarily BLM) 2/x
— Aaron Walker (@sturgidson) September 5, 2018
So there’s plenty of evidence suggesting tireless and creative, rambunctious, confrontational, and peaceful protest is unnerving to him. It is one of many aspects of American life that he, simply, cannot control: so his desire is to render it illegal, to own and dominate it
— Aaron Walker (@sturgidson) September 5, 2018
Trump thinks protests should be illegal and Kavanaugh thinks someone who wants to shake his hand is a security threat.
They are telling you what they want this country to be. Believe them. https://t.co/q9SdQ9Sl7K
— Moira Whelan (@moira) September 5, 2018
Demonstrators have already faced consequences for exercising their First Amendment rights at Kavanaugh’s hearing. CNN reported that a total of 70 protesters were arrested for protesting on the first day of the proceedings.
On Wednesday morning, the protesters returned to the hearing room to find no apparent allies on the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is overseeing the confirmation hearings. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) apologized to Kavanaugh for “the circumstances” after several demonstrators were removed for vocally opposing the anti-choice extremist, while Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) warned against “insolence” in the chamber.
After a few protests early in the hearing, Lisa Desjardins, a correspondent for the PBS“Newshour” tweeted that the public had been barred from the room.
NOW: Police and staff are keeping all seats for the public empty. No more public inside. There is a line outside, unclear if this is temporary.
This is why you hear no more protests. pic.twitter.com/ZMOzwvUYU7
— Lisa Desjardins (@LisaDNews) September 5, 2018
Organizers with the Women’s March later tweeted that they and other protesters were back in the room and ready to continue demonstrating.
Protesters interrupted Brett #Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation hearings for a second day. Police arrested 70 protesters, mostly women, yesterday. pic.twitter.com/lB03ybMBDv
— AJ+ (@ajplus) September 5, 2018
Not content to attempt to curb legal protests, the president also raged against Woodward’s book, “Fear: Trump in the White House.” The book portrays Trump as a serial liar who officials have privately worried possesses the knowledge of “a fifth or sixth grader” regarding issues like relations with North Korea—and wondered why lawmakers wouldn’t “change libel laws” to protect someone such as himself from such accounts.
Isn’t it a shame that someone can write an article or book, totally make up stories and form a picture of a person that is literally the exact opposite of the fact, and get away with it without retribution or cost. Don’t know why Washington politicians don’t change libel laws?
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 5, 2018
Trump has frequently railed against journalists for writing negative stories about him, and this is just the latest time he has made a public call for Congress to amend libel laws to protect him.
Last winter, following the release of another White House exposé, Michael Wolff’s “Fire and Fury,” Trump warned that he would “be taking a look at our nation’s libel laws.”
As MSNBC reporter Ari Melber noted on “Morning Joe,” the president suggestion served to chill free press rights—and was not based in an understanding of U.S. laws regarding libel and defamation.
“Libel laws are state laws,” Melber said. “That tweet, beyond being a potential abuse of the president’s role in trying to bully the free press given the federal First Amendment, also shows a stunning lack of knowledge and total ignorance about how libel laws work.”
Trump “shows a stunning lack of knowledge and total ignorance about how libel laws work”
“He would need all 50 states to change the laws if he wants pro-Trump libel laws” – @AriMelber reporting on @Morning_Joe pic.twitter.com/75lTI4JL1T
— TheBeat w/Ari Melber (@TheBeatWithAri) September 5, 2018
In addition to protests inside the hearing room there were protests outside as these tweets show.
Also in front of the Hart Senate Office Bldg. for the Kavanaugh hearings some handy polling. ? @UltraViolet pic.twitter.com/rtpytXEKZt
— José S. Woss (@JoseWoss) September 4, 2018
These posters are all over DC so senators can’t miss them as Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing begins. And it’s true – Roe v. Wade is WAY more popular than Brett Kavanaugh. #StopKavanaugh #SaveRoe https://t.co/3a4YujtPGV pic.twitter.com/cqh7kCXzkh
— UltraViolet (@UltraViolet) September 4, 2018
It’s difficult to watch woman after woman be dragged from the hearing room by police and not think of the women who will be jailed if Brett Kavanaugh is confirmed and given the chance to criminalize abortion. #StopKavanaugh pic.twitter.com/hDMraUtx2e
— NARAL (@NARAL) September 5, 2018
There were over 70 arrests during yesterday’s #KavanaughConfirmationHearings and over 10 this morning because we already know that he’ll side with the wealthy + corporations, is a major threat to women’s healthcare, the environment and workers #StopKavanaugh Call 866-426-2631 pic.twitter.com/QGt0OfHQqy
— Fight For 15 (@fightfor15) September 5, 2018
Sights at the Stop Kavanaugh protest in the Hart Senate office building @ABC7News pic.twitter.com/8VJGlVGE2i
— Caroline Patrickis (@Cpatrickis) September 4, 2018
Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination poses a major threat to the legal standing of our environmental safeguards—so @foe_us activists in Minnesota, Washington & Illinois rallied to #StopKavanaugh last week! pic.twitter.com/MrlmP9w4rV
— Friends of the Earth (@foe_us) September 5, 2018
Women protest Judge Kavanaugh’s nomination to SCOTUS over Roe v. Wade in handmaids tale costumes pic.twitter.com/MRR1EMKcGz
— Alexandra Limon (@AlexLimonNews) September 4, 2018
Protests continue through the second day of Kavanaugh’s Senate confirmation hearing. Watch live: https://t.co/XMLOAY0A6M pic.twitter.com/H1RI8jPDbv
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) September 5, 2018
Block Kavanaugh!
Mass protests and disruptions are hitting the confirmation hearing for Trump’s Supreme Court pick. 70 protesters we’re arrested yesterday and another 22 arrested today so far.#ShutItDown https://t.co/Nq2gwFjOYW
— Occupy Milwaukee (@OccupyMilwaukee) September 5, 2018
Late night projection at the Supreme Court to send a clear message to the Senate:
Roe V. Wade is more popular than Brett Kavanaugh. https://t.co/3a4YujtPGV #StopKavanaugh pic.twitter.com/raiWrkgc33
— UltraViolet (@UltraViolet) September 5, 2018