Boisterous protesters of Donald Trump packed the streets Thursday evening around Target Center in downtown Minneapolis for the president's rally at Target Center, and the night was largely peaceful until disturbances flared in fits and starts as attendees left the arena and were confronted by agitated demonstrators.
Much of the day and early evening remained peaceful outside the packed arena before a string of incidents prompted police to form protective lines in an effort to keep the adversaries from going too far.
The protesters appeared to end up at an impasse with police at S. 6th Street and Hennepin Avenue. Officers on bicycles and horses held a line while officers marched through in riot helmets and batons. At the intersection, the tone of protesters' ire turned away from Trump and toward the police.
Shortly after 9 p.m., protesters began burning Trump memorabilia in the street, including flags and "Make America Great Again" hats. According to the Unicorn Riot livestream, vehicles leaving the area were confronted by protesters and a flag was snagged from one car as it crept past. One man in an SUV calmly handed a protester his "MAGA" hat.
Police employed pepper spray in an effort to quell one disturbance, and members of a pro-Trump militia-style group a few blocks away were confronted by police as they left their hotel.
A brief period of relative calm seemed to take hold until shortly after 10 p.m., when officers at the corner of 6th and Hennepin used their bikes to push back protesters and at least one sent a full stream of pepper spray in the direction of the crowd amid a chant of "Whose streets? Our streets!"
Amid the use of pepper spray and other tactics by police, Mayor Jacob Frey expressed "full confidence in Chief [Medaria] Arradondo to address public safety needs," said Mychal Vlatkovich, a spokesman for the mayor told the Star Tribune.
Departing Trump supporters made their way through the phalanx of protesters in small groups, often verbally or physically harassed before police intervened.