NEW YORK (AP) — Groups planning to demonstrate against the upcoming Republican National Convention will have some unfriendly company on the asphalt and concrete outside Madison Square Garden.
Members of a new group of young Republican conservatives plan to protest the protesters.
Tom Paladino, who leads the New York chapter of Protest Warriors, a nationwide organization, said members want to show the protesters that “there are Republicans that will protest them right back.”
Jason Sager, a member from Brooklyn, added, “We are the right-wing freedom fighters. We are out there and are just as animated as the protesters can be.”
Protest Warriors, which claims about 3,000 members nationwide, expects about 200 participants in New York for the four-day convention, which begins Aug. 30 and is expected to draw tens of thousands of opponents of President Bush.
Leaders say they know they won’t have equal representation, but hope that the contrast helps them stand out. They will be armed with their own picket signs, T-shirts and even video cameras to capture their mission.
“It’s going to be the protest Olympics. They’re all going to be trying to outdo each other,” said Kfir Alfia, of Austin, Texas, who formed the group last year with Alan Lipton after they crashed anti-war demonstrations in San Francisco, carrying signs that said: “Except for Ending Slavery, Fascism, Nazism and Communism, War Has Never Solved Anything.”
Activists hurled signs at them and hissed “Fascists” as they marched along, Mr. Alfia and Mr. Lipton said. They said they were surprised to encounter animosity at a peace rally and decided to publicize their experience.
They posted videos of their counterprotests on the Internet and began coordinating more actions. The movement attracted young conservatives from across the country, as well as praise from conservative icons such as talk-show host Rush Limbaugh.
This spring, the group protested anti-war rallies in several cities, including New York.
For now, Protest Warriors’ convention plans are not clear because they depend on the anti-Bush groups. Some of those groups still are awaiting police permits for their demonstrations.
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