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By CHRIS KARDISH
Beaver County Blue via AP
May 6, 2013 – RALEIGH — More than two dozen members of the NAACP and other activists were arrested Monday as part of continuing protests of Republican policies in the state capital, bringing to dozens the number of nonviolent demonstrators facing charges.
The demonstrators were arrested Monday by Raleigh and General Assembly police. The number of arrests, as well as the size of the crowd that turned out to offer support, grew from last Monday’s demonstrations, when 17 were arrested.
General Assembly Police Chief Jeff Weaver said law enforcement officials decided to admit them despite last week’s arrests while they determine what the law permits. He said those arrested most recently will face the same charges of second-degree trespassing, failure to disperse on command and the displaying of signs or placards, which violates building rules.
The group arrested Monday included Barber’s 20-year-old son, William Joseph Barber III, a student at North Carolina Central University; William Chafe, former dean of Arts and Sciences at Duke University; Robert Korstad, a professor of public policy and history at Duke; Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, an historian at the University of North Carolina; Charles van der Horst, a professor at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and members of the social justice group Raging Grannies.
“I started in 1954 at the Youth March for Integrated Schools in New York,” said Vicki Ryder of Raging Grannies. “I’ve been doing this for a long time.”
She and her fellow protestors directed their anger at the GOP-controlled legislature, which has refused to accept federal dollars to expand Medicaid to provide health insurance to more poor people, cut unemployment benefits, ended the earned income tax credit and passed new voting restrictions. Republicans have controlled the Legislature since 2011.
Van der Horst said those policies, in addition to efforts to restrict access to abortion, expose hypocrisy within the GOP ranks.
“These people don’t believe in the sanctity of life,” he said. “They believe in protecting their own wealth and their own power.”
Jordan Shaw, communications director for House Speaker Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg, referred questions to law enforcement officials.
Protest announcements followed the House passage of a bill requiring voters to show photo identification at the polls, which many Democrats and civil rights leaders equate to a poll tax.
Barber said demonstrations with the potential for arrests will continue despite strong GOP opposition, but the hope is to sway Republican Gov. Pat McCrory to intervene or encourage legislators to repeal the laws they’ve passed.
“If they don’t, our goal is simple, which is always the goal of nonviolent civil disobedience, is to shine the unavoidable moral light on that which is wrong until it is so clear to everyone how people have misused their power,” he said.
The NAACP will announce details of a tour to press Republican lawmakers in their home districts Tuesday.