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Thursday, 30 March 2017
'The activist Bonnie and Clyde': young lovers lead Portland's Trump resistance
Activism is the foundation of the relationship between Kathryn
Stevens and Gregory McKelvey, leaders in the Oregon city’s post-election
protest
Young, in love, and part of the resistance: Gregory McKelvey and Kathryn Stevens at a protest.
Photograph: Gregory McKelvey
Emily E Smith
The doormat outside a generic apartment in a suburb of Portland,
Oregon, bears the words “COME BACK WITH A WARRANT”. Inside, two leaders
of the self-titled resistance are at rest. Kathryn Stevens answers the
door in workout clothes. In the living room, her boyfriend, Gregory
McKelvey, lounges on a sectional in sweats.
This sunny weekday afternoon comes as a quiet break in an otherwise
frenetic chapter in their lives. “Before the election,” Stevens says, “I
was a very ritualistic, regimented person. I woke up at a specific
time, I did yoga. Routines no longer exist. You have to adapt.”
In the wake of Trump’s election, the activists, who are both 24, swiftly formed a group called Portland’s Resistance
to fight “a Trump presidency, the rise of white nationalism, and
widening income inequality”. McKelvey says local protesters needed
leadership, and they looked to him for guidance. Amid this turmoil,
Portland’s Resistance was launched. Within a day, they had created a
Facebook page and begun organizing.
McKelvey and Stevens soon found themselves at the center of a chaotic scene. On the third night of anti-Trump demonstrations, Portland’s protests took a violent turn as anarchists shattered storefront windows and car windshields.
Local television crews visited McKelvey’s home and asked him to
answer for the violence. “Martin Luther King said, ‘A riot is the
language of the unheard.’ And it’s not my job to silence anybody that
feels unheard,” he told a KOIN 6 News reporter.
“I think it’s my job to lead by example, and I’m not gonna lead through
chaos. I’m not gonna combat hate with more hate. I’m gonna combat it
with love.”
“OK,” the reporter said, “but when you do the gatherings, in love, do
you think that sometimes invites the other element that is doing the
things you don’t condone?”
“I think we should blame Donald Trump for that,” he answered, “and I do.”
A few weeks later, McKelvey and Stevens created
a GoFundMe page that raised more than $50,000 to help repair property
damaged by rioters. They now envision a movement that’s inclusive, that
upends systems of oppression and that elects like-minded candidates.
Kathryn Stevens at a rally. Photograph: Finn Hawley Blue
McKelvey grew up black in Portland – one of the nation’s whitest big
cities. After college, he enrolled in Lewis and Clark Law School and
worked as a campaign manager for a state congressional candidate.
Through politics, he segued into activism and became involved in local
Black Lives Matter events.
Stevens,
who is queer, moved to Portland for college after growing up in
Vernonia, a small timber town about 40 miles north-west of Portland. As a
teen, she experienced homelessness before a foster family took her in.
Post-college, she has worked as an advocate for the homeless during an
affordable-housing crisis.
Since November, the couple has planned events, made speeches, led
community meetings and spent a night in jail. McKelvey refers to them as
the “activist Bonnie and Clyde”. Activism is not incidental to their relationship. It’s their foundation.
The two began dating after Stevens sent McKelvey a Facebook message
early last summer. Up to that point, their circles had overlapped, but
their paths hadn’t crossed.
At the start of 2016, McKelvey had been invited to speak at a Bernie
Sanders rally. The young law student overcame a bad case of nerves to
discover his knack for public speaking. People kept asking him to speak
at their events, and his involvement grew in local Black Lives Matter
demonstrations. His appearances were gaining attention, and Stevens took
notice.
Her Facebook message to him wasn’t flirtatious. It was more like
networking, in her usual upbeat tone: “I want to know more about the
work you’re doing in the community,” she wrote. “Let’s get coffee
sometime.”
A few days later, Stevens says, McKelvey sent her a message asking if
she was going to a march that evening. “Yeah, for sure, I’ll see you
there,” she responded. She arrived that day to find McKelvey, to her
surprise, giving a speech in front of a big crowd. “Oh, OK, I’m going to
your event,” she thought.
‘I couldn’t do what I do without her’, says McKelvey. Photograph: Finn Hawley Blue
The next day, they met for coffee and went to a food drive for a
local not-for-profit group. They recognized in one another a shared
vision. Their interests and values aligned. From then on, Stevens
attended every one of McKelvey’s events she could.
She admired his energy, his commitment to the cause. “In a lot of my
relationships in the past, my ambitions have been something that have
been difficult for other people to handle,” Stevens said. But for both,
activism is the top priority. “I couldn’t do what I do without her,”
McKelvey says. By the time election day arrived, Stevens and McKelvey
were together in every sense. They were often side by side at
demonstrations in news photos: McKelvey in skinny jeans and a long
jacket, Stevens with a beanie pulled over her buzz cut.
A couple of weeks after the riots, the pair were arrested during a
protest organized by high school students. They’d been invited by a few
students to offer guidance. Hours into the event, police arrested
McKelvey and Stevens on allegations of disorderly conduct. Those charges
were later refiled. McKelvey’s now charged with failure to obey a
police officer, and Stevens is charged with resisting arrest. They plan
to sue the Portland police bureau for what they allege were baseless and
targeted arrests.
Neither McKelvey nor Stevens were happy to be arrested, but they
accept that arrest is a risk inherent in protesting. Perhaps increasing
their chances: none of their events has been permitted.
“You have a right to go out there and speak your mind,” McKelvey
says. “The constitution says nothing about a permit.” But McKelvey and
Stevens say that decision may change for future events. They acknowledge
that permitted protests may be safer and more accessible for some.
There is no blueprint for leading a movement that fits this precise political moment. They’re learning as they go.
“Neither of us thinks we’re the smartest people in the world or the
best activists in the world,” McKelvey says. “But we happen to be at the
forefront of this movement right now. So we’re going to utilize that
right now to hopefully push it toward progress.”
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