President Donald Trump late Friday praised Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler for condemning rioters. Wheeler, a Democrat who is also police commissioner, said the day before that rioters were committing attempted murder.
“This is a quote from the mayor; hes come a long way,” Trump said at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.
The president proceeded to share a slightly altered version of Wheelers comments. The mayor told reporters: “When you commit arson with an accelerant in an attempt to burn down a building that is occupied by people that you have intentionally trapped inside, you are not demonstrating, you are attempting to commit murder.”
“Hes come a long way when he made that statement,” Trump added.
Portland officials have struggled to quell the violence thats continued virtually nonstop since late May. Rioters linked to Antifa, a far-left, anarcho-communist group, have inflicted tens of millions of dollars in damage and lost business on downtown. A number of business owners and officials have boarded up doors and windows to try to protect the buildings.
Trump surged federal assets to Portland in early July after rioters began targeting the Mark O. Hatfield Courthouse, nearly overwhelming the officers there.
Federal law enforcement and rioters faced off for weeks. Wheeler ejected federal officers from the police command center and voted with other City Council members to discipline any Portland police officers who worked together with federal law enforcement. On most nights, police officers were absent during rioting downtown. Wheeler blamed federal officers for the violence.
City, state, and federal officials reached an agreement late last month that saw Oregon state police rush to the city to help deal with the violence.
Wheeler originally blamed federal officers for the mayhem and joined rioters one night outside the courthouse. Demonstrators say the Trump administration used disproportionate force, and several actions taken by officers are under internal investigation.
Asked how the situation would end, Wheeler told reporters in mid-July: “We get rid of the feds. Number two, we contain and de-escalate the situation. Number three, we clean up downtown. Number four, we open up for business.”
That plan has failed. Wheeler took different stance this week, vowing to use every tool at his disposal to quell the riots.
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