Trump signs order targeting Antifa as a terrorist organisation
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US President Donald Trump has capitalised on conservative activist Charlie Kirk's death to crack down on left-wing groups which he claimed was responsible.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Sept 22 designating the Antifa movement a “terrorist organisation,” the White House said, after promising actions targeting left-wing groups following Mr Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
Mr Kirk, a prominent conservative activist with close ties to Mr Trump, was assassinated on Sept 10
A 22-year-old technical college student has been charged with Mr Kirk’s murder.
Investigators are still looking for a motive and have not said the suspect operated in concert with any groups.
But the Trump administration has used the killing as a pretext to revive years-old plans to target left-wing groups
Antifa, short for anti-fascist, is a “decentralised, leaderless movement composed of loose collections of groups, networks and individuals,” according to the Anti-Defamation League, which tracks extremists.
“While some extreme actors who claim to be affiliated with Antifa do engage in violence or vandalism at rallies and events, this is not the norm,” it says on its website.
Mr Trump’s 370-word executive order directs “all relevant executive departments and agencies” to “investigate, disrupt, and dismantle any and all illegal operations” conducted by Antifa or anyone who funds such actions, according to the White House.
“Individuals associated with and acting on behalf of Antifa further coordinate with other organisations and entities for the purpose of spreading, fomenting, and advancing political violence and suppressing lawful political speech.”
Federal law enforcement officials already investigate violent and organised crime associated with a variety of hate groups and ideological movements.
The US government does not currently officially designate solely domestic groups as terrorist organisations in large part because of constitutional protections.
But a Justice Department official with knowledge of discussions on the issue said Mr Trump’s order would unlock expansive investigative and surveillance authorities and powers.
The person, who declined to be named, said the designation would allow the US government to more closely track the finances and movements of US citizens and to investigate any foreign ties of the loose network of groups and non-profits the Trump administration views as Antifa.
Focus is on foreign funding
Critics of the administration have warned that it may pursue an attack on free speech and opponents of the Republican president.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Counterterrorism and Counterintelligence Divisions will be used to track finances - both domestic and foreign sources of funding - and attempt to identify the central leadership of Antifa, the official said.
FBI surveillance and investigative operations are normally restricted in how they can target US citizens.
“The big picture focus is on foreign money seeding US politics and drawing connections to foreign bank accounts,” a White House source familiar with the plans told Reuters.
“The designation of Antifa gives us the authority to subpoena banks, look at wire transfers, foreign and domestic sources of funding, that kind of thing,” the White House source said.
Political violence experts and US law enforcement officials have previously identified far-right attacks as the leading source of domestic violent extremism.
Trump administration officials have sought to portray left-wing groups as the main drivers of political violence in their remarks since Mr Kirk’s death.
Legal experts have said such steps may be legally and constitutionally dubious, hard to execute and raise free-speech concerns, given that subscription to an ideology is not generally considered criminal under US law.
During the first Trump administration there were at least two failed efforts to designate Antifa a terrorist organisation, according to internal Department of Homeland Security communications viewed by Reuters. REUTERS