Washington, D.C., Democrat Mayor Muriel Bowser ordered the 2020 protest-era "BLACK LIVES MATTER" mural removed from the street near the White House last week, and crews began doing it Monday morning.
The news of the work starting comes from The Washington Post, which claimed the move was done due to pressure from Republicans.
Bowser, who has long been under fire from President Donald Trump for her local governance in the nation's capital, merely called it a "distraction" — coincidentally which is what critics from the right called it during the hot-button 2020 presidential campaign.
"The mural inspired millions of people and helped our city through a painful period, but now we can't afford to be distracted by meaningless congressional interference," Bowser wrote on X last Tuesday. "The devastating impacts of the federal job cuts must be our number one concern."
The move shows Bowser’s striking shift in tone toward Trump and congressional Republicans since the president's first term in office.
Bowser ordered the painting and renamed the intersection Black Lives Matter Plaza as a public act of defiance in June 2020. It came after days of chaotic protests at that location over police brutality following the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer.
Her approach to the protests brought her into direct conflict with Trump. The president at the time accused Bowser of losing control of her city and threatened to invoke his power to take over the Metropolitan Police Department. He did not follow through but declared his own multi-agency lockdown that included helicopters flying at low altitudes to intimidate protesters.
In Trump's second stint in the White House, Bowser has worked to avoid conflict and downplay any points of contention. She traveled to Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate to meet with the president after his election and has publicly emphasized their points of agreement, such as a mutual desire to return federal workers back to their offices full time.
Trump recently revived a frequent campaign talking point about wanting a federal "takeover" of the nation's capital, describing Washington as riddled with crime, graffiti, and homeless encampments.
Bowser has refused to comment on reports that the White House was preparing an executive order targeting Washington; she publicly said the greatest threat to the Home Rule autonomy was "some of the people in Congress."
A measure currently before Congress, named the BOWSER Act, seeks to completely revoke the Home Rule Act of 1973 that grants the capital city limited autonomy.
That would be a deeply controversial, likely testing the strength of the three-seat GOP House majority. Some representatives have used budget riders to target Washington policies ranging from marijuana legalization to whether right turns on red lights should be legal. And some in Congress have spoken publicly of their disdain for the Black Lives Matter street painting.
While Bowser and Trump agreed on returning federal workers to their offices, Trump’s push to slash the federal workforce is already roiling city finances. A report last week from the city’s chief financial officer predicted a $1 billion budget shortfall over the next three years due to the loss of thousands of workers from the federal government.
Nee Nee Taylor, a founding member of the D.C. Black Lives Matter affiliate, addressed Bowser on X last Tuesday, saying, "You never cared about Black Lives Mattering. You painting those words were performative."
Information from The Associated Press was used to compile this report.
Eric Mack ✉
Eric Mack has been a writer and editor at Newsmax since 2016. He is a 1998 Syracuse University journalism graduate and a New York Press Association award-winning writer.
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