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‘Bigger fish to fry’: Mural removal underlines tension in DC

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Tue, 11 Mar 2025, 4:27pm
People collect pieces of the Black Lives Matter street mural as crews begin work to remove it in Washington DC.
People collect pieces of the Black Lives Matter street mural as crews begin work to remove it in Washington DC.

‘Bigger fish to fry’: Mural removal underlines tension in DC

Author
AFP,
Publish Date
Tue, 11 Mar 2025, 4:27pm

Workers in Washington on Monday began removing a Black Lives Matter street mural installed during the height of 2020 racial justice protests, bowing to pressure from President Donald Trump.

Large, yellow lettering reading 鈥淏lack Lives Matter鈥 has been painted on a roadway near the White House since June 2020, when protests broke out across the nation following the police killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man.

City officials in the US capital have credited the art installation with calming tensions near the White House, where violent clashes between protesters and security personnel had occurred in the days prior.

Trump, who was president at the time of the unrest, returned to office in January seeking to overturn so-called diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) practices which spread widely throughout the public and private sectors following the George Floyd protests.

Congressional Republicans and Trump aides had eyed the mural as part of their move to force changes in the administration of Washington, an overwhelmingly Democratic city.

Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, has sought to establish a good working relationship with Trump, seeking to head off Republican calls for fully overturning the city鈥檚 right to govern itself.

She has also been worried that mass layoffs of federal workers by Trump and his billionaire adviser Elon Musk could wreak havoc on the city鈥檚 finances.

鈥淲e have bigger fish to fry than fights over what has been very important to us and to the history, and especially in our ability to keep our city safe during that time 鈥 that mural played a very important part,鈥 Bowser told reporters last week.

鈥淏ut now our focus is on making sure our residents and our economy survives.鈥

When asked if it was in response to White House pressure, she said: 鈥淚鈥檓 not going to talk about specifics ... but I think it鈥檚 safe to say that people don鈥檛 like it, didn鈥檛 like it.鈥

As jackhammers ploughed away on Monday at the pavement, numerous onlookers snapped photos of the work.

Two African American women told AFP they had come to get a final look at the mural, expressing dismay at the decision to remove it.

Both said they were lifelong Democrats.

鈥淚t鈥檚 history ... and now they鈥檙e basically saying it didn鈥檛 happen,鈥 said one of the two, a 54-year-old caregiver from nearby Virginia who requested anonymity because of her political work.

鈥淭he money you鈥檙e spending to remove it could鈥檝e been spent on so many other things,鈥 she said.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 next?鈥 asked her friend, 57-year-old Tajuana McCallister, a healthcare worker in Maryland.

鈥淏lack history clearly doesn鈥檛 matter to him,鈥 she said, nodding toward the White House.

The site, erected during the protests, showed leaders 鈥渉ave compassion, [were saying] 鈥榳e hear you鈥欌, according to the caregiver.

Its removal, she said, shows 鈥渨hat you [leaders] said didn鈥檛 matter鈥.

-Agence France-Presse

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