5 years after George Floyd's death, Chicago protesters fill Federal Plaza demanding justice and reform
The Brief
On the five-year anniversary of George Floyd's death, activists gathered at Federal Plaza demanding justice, police reform and human rights.
Many were calling for full passage and implementation of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which aims to hold law enforcement accountable for misconduct, enhance transparency, and improve police training.
Chicago has achieved full compliance with just 16% of mandated reforms—covering areas such as use of force, officer training and wellness, community policing, accountability, and transparency.
CHICAGO - On the five-year anniversary of George Floyd's death, about 200 activists gathered at Federal Plaza over Memorial Day weekend, raising their voices and signs to demand justice and call attention to a wide range of issues—from immigrant rights to support for Palestinians and continued police reform.
What we know
Demonstrators said their presence was a powerful reminder of their ongoing fight for civil liberties.
"I think it's important to show up every opportunity we can to protest against the chipping away of our rights, of our freedoms," a demonstrator said.
Many were calling for full passage and implementation of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. The legislation, first introduced in 2020, aims to hold law enforcement accountable for misconduct, enhance transparency, and improve police training.
"The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act was designed for people like myself and you to get justice when you would have those who abuse their power," said Marquinn McDonald, 2nd District council member for Chicago's Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability, who was also present at the rally.
Trump's executive order
The demonstration came weeks after President Donald Trump issued an executive order titled "Strengthening and Unleashing America's Law Enforcement to Pursue Criminals and Protect Innocent Citizens."
The directive proposes rolling back federal consent decrees, increasing the availability of military-grade equipment for police departments, and holding local leaders accountable for restricting police power.
McDonald said Chicagoans want to see healing among police and the public.
"I've talked to the superintendent, and I've talked to many commanders and officers in the (police) department. My family are police. They truly want to see an evolved department, a healed and better department," McDonald said.
Chicago's consent decree
As for Chicago's own consent decree, a federal oversight agreement intended to reform the city's police department, progress has been slow.
According to the city's independent monitor, as of last month, Chicago had achieved full compliance with just 16% of mandated reforms—covering areas such as use of force, officer training and wellness, community policing, accountability, and transparency.
As marchers moved through the Loop, their message was clear: the work is far from over.
"It's our families that come to the U.S. for the so-called American Dream," one activist said.
Chicago Police said the demonstration was peaceful and without issue.
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Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Hot in Herre
Presented by With help from Cris Seda Chabrier Good gracious, this race is bodacious. With temperatures predicted to hit 100 degrees on Primary Day, mayoral front-runner Andrew Cuomo is anxious to get his voters into polling sites — and demanding better preparation from city officials for the heat wave, POLITICO reports. The Board of Election's heat plan is 'insufficient' and 'unacceptable,' with not every poll site being air conditioned, his campaign complained Thursday. The BOE insists it's prepared with fans and water — and that no voter will have to wait in a long line, since there's more than enough bandwidth. The former governor has reason to be concerned about Tuesday turnout: His anticipated victory relies upon robust support from older voters, who are more susceptible to dangerous heat conditions. And polling showed more of his supporters planned to vote on election day, while Zohran Mamdani nabs a greater share of early voters. 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But in a rare instance, the city comptroller publicly disagreed with the assemblymember he's cross-endorsed. 'I don't like the phrase 'globalize the intifada,'' Lander, who is Jewish, told reporters.'Some people, when they say it, they might mean 'fight for the rights of Palestinians,' but I'll tell you, all I can hear is 'open season on Jews.'' Mamdani said the words 'have different meanings for many different people.' He repeated his vow to combat antisemitism and said he opposes language that incites violence. The Muslim candidate was targeted in a potential hate crime this week, the Daily News reported, when somebody left a voicemail to blow up his car. That led Lander to line up behind Mamdani. First in Playbook, he's calling on pro-Cuomo super PAC Fix the City to stop airing 'the hateful, divisive ads that falsely smear Mamdani,' his campaign said, blaming a TV ad calling Mamdani 'risky' and a 'radical' for the threats on his opponent's life. 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Crime is down, nightlife is back, and the $30 billion industry is helping to rebuild the economy @AndrewCuomo tanked with his failed policies like bail reform. Eric Adams: Delivers. Never quits.' — Mayor Eric Adams, on X to top Cuomo adviser Melissa DeRosa, who asked what private club he'd been tweeting from at midnight, amid a war of words that could preview the general election. ABOVE THE FOLD REPORTERS ROUNDTABLE: The unexpected developments in the mayoral primary — not to mention the looming shadow of President Donald Trump's declared war on his hometown — have captivated the nation as much as it has the city itself. To reckon with the crowded primary's still-evolving state of play, POLITICO's Michael Gartland, Nick Reisman, Sally Goldenberg and Jeff Coltin sat down Wednesday for a crackling conversation. Gartland: The race is viewed primarily as a two-person contest at this point, but there are several other candidates. Lander has shown signs of life in the last few days. 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Goldenberg: It's late for Lander to change the shape of the race though. He's polling a very distant third. Lander's best hope is a robust use of ranked-choice voting — something that the candidates and the left have resisted, confoundingly, throughout this race. They've shown no real RCV strategy — something that would probably help a Lander. Read more as we discuss youth versus experience, why New Yorkers seem to discount Cuomo's well-documented misdeeds, the role of allegations of antisemitism. CITY HALL: THE LATEST MAMDANI'S PRESIDENTIAL PICK: Mamdani harshly criticized Donald Trump in the run-up to the 2024 election, but never used his platform as an assemblymember and mayoral candidate with a big social media following to promote Kamala Harris — a notable difference from his fellow contenders in the Democratic mayoral primary. 'I proudly voted for Kamala Harris on the Working Families Party line,' Mamdani said Tuesday, when asked why he didn't endorse the Democratic nominee. 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Wrong for us for mayor.' Starting Thursday on Juneteenth, Myrie's campaign is spending more than $100,000 airing the ad on stations targeting a Black audience, including Hot 97, Power 105.1 and WBLS. 'Before you vote for mayor, take 60 seconds and think about what Andrew Cuomo actually did in 11 years as governor before he resigned in disgrace,' a voice actor says. Cuomo 'cut hundreds of millions from the MTA,' 'slashed funding for supportive housing' and 'forced the mentally ill on our streets and subways,' among other criticisms. The ad doesn't even mention Myrie until the state senator's voice, at the very end, says it was paid for by his campaign. Myrie doesn't have a shot at victory, but has urged New Yorkers to not rank Cuomo. The former governor is relying on support from Black voters to win. 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'This is a moment of crisis that requires Congress to act decisively in order to ensure the safety of every single Member who serves in the People's House.' The threat to Miller comes after Democratic Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband were shot and killed and Democratic state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were critically injured. Congressional lawmakers have been grappling with how to ensure their physical safety as being a politician in the public eye becomes increasingly dangerous. — Emily Ngo More from Congress: — Assemblymember Robert Smullen is interested in running for Rep. Elise Stefanik's seat. (Times Union) — Rep. Mike Lawler breaks with Trump administration on the shutdown of a LGBTQ+ suicide hotline. (NOTUS) — Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand has a bill meant to combat food deserts. (Spectrum News) NEW YORK STATE OF MIND — Hochul is under pressure to collect millions in Atlantic Yards penalties. 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Serrano and Jack Martins … Assemblymember Clyde Vanel … Gateway's Stephen Sigmund … ESD's Emily Mijatovic … Reuters' Jeff Mason … Anne Gearan … Treasury's Rebecca Karabus … Melissa Cooke … former SEC Chair Mary Schapiro (7-0) … Axios' Alex Isenstadt … Christina Ruffini … Marcus Brauchli Missed Wednesday's New York Playbook PM? We forgive you. Read it here.


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Israel warns Hezbollah to stay out of its fight against Iran: ‘Leader hasn't learned from his predecessors'
Israel's defense minister on Friday warned Hezbollah to stay out of its fight against Iran, saying that the terror group's leader 'hasn't learned from his predecessors.' 'I suggest that the Lebanese proxy be careful, and understand that Israel has lost patience with the terrorists who threaten it,' Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said after Hezbollah leadership condemned Israel's airstrikes on Iran, according to the Times of Israel. 'The Hezbollah leader hasn't learned from his predecessors and is threatening to act against Israel,' he said about the Iranian proxy groups' former leader, Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed by Israeli airstrikes in September. 5 Lebanon's Hezbollah deputy leader, Sheikh Naim Qassem, speaks during a rally supporting Palestinians in Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Beirut, Lebanon, on Oct. 13, 2023. REUTERS Hezbollah's leader, Naim Qassem, who succeeded Nasrallah in October, said Thursday that the terror group would 'act as we see fit' reading the conflict between Israel and Iran. The group declared it was standing in full solidarity with Iran and that threats against Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, would lead to 'disastrous consequences.' 'Threats to assassinate [Khamenei] are foolish and reckless, and will have disastrous consequences… Merely uttering them is an offense to hundreds of millions of believers and those connected to Islam, and it is utterly reprehensible. Today, we are more determined and united around him,' Hezbollah declared. Israel began to conduct airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites and its missile capabilities on June 13 after fears that their longtime enemy, which has repeatedly called for the destruction of the Jewish state, was close to creating a nuclear weapon. Iran retaliated with a barrage of missiles and drone strikes on Israel — fully igniting the deadly conflict between the two Middle Eastern nations. 5 Israel's Foreign Affairs Minister, Israel Katz, listens during a meeting of the United Nations Security Council on the war in Gaza, on March 11, 2024. AP On Thursday, Iran launched a missile barrage that damaged the Soroka Medical Center in the southern city of Beersheba and hit a high-rise and several other residential buildings near Tel Aviv. At least 240 people were wounded by the Iranian missiles, four of them seriously, Israel's Health Ministry said. Early Friday morning, Israeli officials warned of an incoming barrage of missiles from Iran, with at least one making a strike on the nation's largest southern city, Beersheba. In Iran, Israeli air attacks have killed 639 people, including some of the nation's top military commanders and nuclear scientists. 5 Smoke billows from a building at Soroka Hospital in Beersheba in southern Israel following an Iranian missile attack on June 19, 2025. AFP via Getty Images 5 Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi lays a wreath of flowers at the grave of slain Lebanese Hezbollah's Leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in an Israeli air strike in September 2024, at his mausoleum in Beirut's southern suburbs on June 3, 2025. AFP via Getty Images Fears that the fighting between Iran and Israel will continue to escalate prompted US special envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack to fly to Beirut on Thursday and meet with Lebanese officials. Barrack told Lebanon's Speaker of Parliament and ally of Hezbollah, Nabih Berri, it would be a 'very bad decision' if the terror that if the terror organization were to attack Israel. 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AP 'Based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters, reading a statement directly from Trump during her daily briefing. Leavitt also stressed that Iran currently has the capability of creating a nuclear weapon. 'Iran has all that it needs to keep a nuclear weapon,' Leavitt said. 'All they need is a decision from the Supreme Leader to do that.' Iran said Friday it would refuse to discuss its nuclear program while under Israeli attack. Israel has asked for US involvement, particularly to use its bunker-busting bombs on the Fordow nuclear facility hidden deep in an Iranian mountain. On Friday, foreign ministers from the European Union, including Britain, France, and Germany, are set to meet with Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in Geneva in hopes of de-escalating the conflict. with Post wires


Boston Globe
4 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Brick thrown at Brookline kosher grocery store highlights antisemitism's rise
This act was, simply, antisemitic in the way it blamed a Jewish individual in America for the actions of the Jewish state in Israel. Advertisement As a state that values every resident, we must emphasize clearly that antisemitism is wrong and antisemitic actions can't be tolerated. We must work to change a culture where slogans that can be perceived as violent threats against the Jewish people — like 'globalize the intifada,' a reference to the often violent uprisings by Palestinians in Israel — are considered acceptable discourse. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up While the brick was thrown when the store was closed, any attack on a Jewish individual can spark fear across the entire Jewish community. That is especially true after two lethal attacks recently. In Washington, D.C., two Israeli embassy staffers Advertisement Earlier this month, an Egyptian man was charged with Attacks against Jews are nothing new in the Boston area. In 2021, a man was The The Massachusetts Legislature formed the Commission cochair state Senator John Velis (D-Westfield) says one challenge is the tendency to see antisemitism as someone else's problem. 'People on the left see it on the right, people on the right see it on the left,' Velis said. 'Antisemitism today shape-shifts, it mutates, it's ubiquitous. It's moved away from being only on the right or left, it's everywhere.' Advertisement Jeremy Burton, CEO of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Boston, attributed antisemitism's rise to a culture that lets progressive groups conflate criticism of Israel with language that demonizes Jews. 'The use of Zionists as a slur has been normalized,' Burton said. 'There is this willingness to absolve and minimize a rhetoric which tolerates, if not promotes, violence against Jews anywhere, as if no harm might come from that.' There are real debates about the distinctions between anti-Zionism — opposing Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state — and antisemitism. Activists have every right to criticize Israel, its government, and its military. A robust debate about Israel's prolonged and deadly military campaign against Hamas in Gaza is warranted. But the Butcherie is not a political institution; it's a store that sells food to Jews who adhere to religious dietary laws. The brick was thrown through a window displaying a winery map of Israel that depicted the disputed West Bank as part of Israel. But holding a Jewish-owned store responsible for actions of the Israeli government has no justification. It would strike most people as obviously bigoted — and ridiculous — to protest for a 'free Tibet' by throwing a brick through the window of a Chinese grocery store, even if it displayed a map that included Tibet. Yet too many Americans can't bring themselves to understand that it's just as wrong to inflict violence on Jews or Jewish institutions to protest Israel. Advertisement Brandeis University Professor of American Jewish History Jonathan Sarna said historically, domestic antisemitism rises when tensions rise between Israel and its Arab neighbors. Sarna said what struck him was the premeditation involved in writing a message on the brick, which implies not sudden anger but a statement of power. 'This incident, in addition to trying to make Jews fearful … is also about an expression of power, a reminder to Jews that we, whoever the people are who threw the rock, are stronger or at least are able to inflict lots of fear upon you,' Sarna said. That's a message our society cannot accept. Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us