Trump election protesters take to streets fifth straight day
Demonstrators in major US cities took to the streets for a fifth straight day on Sunday to protest President-elect Donald Trump, who named anti-establishment firebrand Steve Bannon his top strategist and top Republican Reince Priebus his White House chief of staff in the first appointments of his new administration.
Trump's choices came as he reaffirmed plans to immediately deport or jail as many as three million undocumented immigrants, in his first television interview since his election.
Trump's two sides - the practical deal maker and the anti-establishment provocateur - were on display in his appointments of Bannon, the CEO of right-wing, conspiracy-mongering Breitbart website, and Priebus, a seasoned Republican operative with close ties to House Speaker Paul Ryan.
"Steve and Reince are highly qualified leaders who worked well together on our campaign and led us to a historic victory. Now I will have them both with me in the White House as we work to make America great again," Trump said in a statement.
The appointments to Trump's inner circle are seen as key to setting the tone of an administration led by a 70-year-old political novice.
Following several nights of unrest, crowds of people marched in parks in New York City and San Francisco, and planned to do so in Oakland, California, according to social media.
A few thousand joined a march at the south end of New York’s Central Park, beginning at a Trump property on Columbus Circle and walking toward the real estate mogul’s skyscraper headquarters more than a kilometre away.
They chanted, “Say it loud, say it clear, immigrants are welcomed here,” and held signs such as “White silence = violence,” and “Don’t mourn, organise.”
Thousands in several cities have demonstrated since the results from Tuesday’s election showed Trump, a Republican, lost the popular tally but gained enough votes in the 538-person Electoral College to win the presidency, surprising the world.
Police arrested 71 people on Saturday night in downtown Portland, Oregon, on various charges including disorderly conduct, criminal trespassing and interfering with a police officer, KATU TV reported. All those arrested will be given an additional citation for failing to obey a police officer.
According to Portland Police, people were throwing objects including road flares and bottles at police officers. Someone also spray painted some anti-Trump graffiti on a police vehicle early Sunday morning.
Largely peaceful demonstrators in urban areas have said Trump threatens their civil and human rights. They have decried Trump’s campaign promises to restrict immigration and register Muslims, as well as allegations the former reality-TV star sexually abused women.
Dozens have been arrested and a handful of police injured.
In San Francisco on Sunday, about 1,000 people marched through Golden Gate Park toward a beach where they chanted, “Let’s make waves.” They held signs such as “I resist racism” and “Down with the Trumps.”
Civil rights groups have monitored violence against US minorities since Trump’s win, citing reports of attacks on women in Islamic head scarves, of racist graffiti and of bullying of immigrant children. They have called on Trump to denounce the attacks.
Trump said he was “so saddened” to hear of instances of violence by some of his supporters against minorities, according to a transcript released on Sunday of an interview with the CBS program “60 Minutes”.
But he made clear in excerpts of the interview that he still intends to crack down on the undocumented, focusing on people with criminal records.
"What we are going to do is get the people that are criminal and have criminal records, gang members, drug dealers, where a lot of these people - probably two million, it could be even three million - we are getting them out of our country or we are going to incarcerate," Trump said.
Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s campaign manager, said on Fox News on Sunday that she was sure many of the protesters filling the streets were paid professionals, though she offered no proof.
Suggesting a double standard, Conway said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that if Clinton had won and Trump supporters had protested, “people would be freaking out that his supporters were not accepting election results”.
“It’s time really for President Obama and Secretary Clinton to say to these protesters, ‘This man is our president,’” she said on NBC.
Republican House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan told CNN on Sunday that protests are protected by the First Amendment as long as they are peaceful.
Neither Obama nor Clinton has called for an end to the protests. Obama told Trump at the White House on Thursday that he was going to help Trump succeed, “because if you succeed, then the country succeeds”.
Clinton told supporters at a New York hotel on Wednesday: “Donald Trump is going to be our president. We owe him an open mind and the chance to lead.”
Trump on Sunday attacked the New York Times for coverage he said was “very poor and highly inaccurate”.
“The @nytimes sent a letter to their subscribers apologising for their BAD coverage of me. I wonder if it will change - doubt it?” Trump wrote on Twitter.
The newspaper published a letter in Sunday’s editions from publisher Arthur Sulzberger and executive editor Dean Baquet, not apologising, but thanking readers for their loyalty and asking how news outlets underestimated Trump’s support.
The Times plans to “hold power to account, impartially and unflinchingly” during the Trump presidency, they wrote.
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