Over 650 People Arrested in D.C. During Week of Indigenous-led Climate Action Calling on Biden to be the Climate Leader he Promised to be

On the final day of protest, dozens of climate youth activists were arrested as they blocked an intersection near the U.S. Capitol, stressing the need for immediate climate action.
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Indigenous youth and other climate activists taking part in a sit-in protest near the Capitol to urge President Biden to declare a climate emergency on the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuels' protest. Credit: Julie Dermansky

As environmental advocates from across the United States converged in Washington, D.C. last week to take part in the five day “People vs. Fossil Fuelsโ€ action, President Biden’s infrastructure package remained stalled, in part, by West Virginia Senator Joe Manchinโ€™s push to cut its largest climate measure.

The series of fossil fuel protests were organized byย a coalition of over 25 environmental groups known as Build Back Fossil Free, a poke at Bidenโ€™s โ€œBuild Back Betterโ€ agenda. Indigenous leadership in the fight against fossil fuels was forefront at the rallies.

Capitol police in the process of arresting climate activists including Indigenous youth that led the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuels’ protest in Washington D.C. on October 15, 2021. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Climate activist being carried away by the Capitol police on October 15, the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuelsโ€™ protest. Credit: Julie Dermansky

The week of protest included acts of civil disobedience leading to over 650 arrests. Most of the arrests took place in front of the White House, where sit-ins were held for four consecutive days. Others were arrested at theย Department of Interior building, home to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), after holding a sit in inside on October 14.

Guards inside the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, D.C. standing behind custom police tape marked โ€œClimate Emergency” that activist put across the entrances of buildings October 14 while dozens of Indigenous activists protested inside. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Indigenous youth leading a march from Freedom Plaza to the Capitol on the five day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuels’ protest. Credit: Julie Dermansky

And on the last day of the protest, October 15, further arrests were made when a group of Indigenous youth and their supporters participated in a sit-in at an intersection near the Capitol, blocking traffic and refusing to disperse when ordered to do so by the Capitol Police

At all of the actions last week, activistsย expressed their rage thatย Biden has not delivered on climate-related campaign promises, adding that the administrationโ€™s plans do not go far enough to protect the planet from the rapidly intensifying climateย crisis.ย 

Sonny Urgent speaking about how climate change has affected her community in Northern Alaska in front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool on the last day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossilfuelsโ€™ protest, October 15, 2021. The Arctic, she said, is warming at nearly three times the rate of the rest of the world, and her community in Utqiagvik is on the front lines. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Zanagee Artis, the co-executive director of Zero Hour, speaking by the Capitol Reflecting Pool on the last day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuelsโ€™ protest. Credit: Julie Dermansky

โ€œWe need climate action now. We are out of time to address this issue,โ€ said Zanagee Artis, the co-executive director of Zero Hour, a youth-led climate justice organization, during a rally near the U.S. Capitol on October 15. โ€œI campaigned for Biden. I called voters in Philadelphia. Black and brown people voted in droves, young people voted in record numbers for a president who promised action on climate change. Now he has the power to revoke the permits for Line 3 [pipeline] and he has not. He has the power to stop DAPL and he has not. He has the power to revoke fossil fuel leases and he has not.โ€  

A reporter at a White House briefing on October 14 pointed out that hundreds of climate protesters were in front of the White House demanding Biden stop approving fossil fuel projects and declare a climate emergency. The reporter then asked if the administration is considering or listening to their demands. 

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki confirmed that they are listening. “I would encourage anyone out there, or not, to look at what the President is proposing, what heโ€™s trying to push across the finish line at this point, which is an enormous investment and commitment to addressing the climate crisis,โ€ she said. 

However, the Indigenous Environmental Network, one of the leading groups behind the five-day protest, has come out against both major pieces of legislation, as previously reported by DeSmog. The network contends that each bill includes some form of fossil fuel subsidies โ€” and that there is no time for a middle-of-the-road approach.

As Biden readies himself to leave for the COP26 United Nations climate summit next month, the planet is on track to warm more than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels. If greenhouse gas emissions arenโ€™t rapidly reduced, scientists warnย this level of global warming will likely causeย irreversible warming of the planet, leading toย increased catastrophic disasters including fires, heat and cold waves, flooding, and the intensifying ofย hurricanes.

Demonstrators making their way to the Capitol on the last day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuels’ protest in October 2021. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Goldman Prize winner Sharon Lavigne of Louisiana marching from Freedom Plaza to the Capitol on the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuels’ protest with a couple hundred others. Credit: Julie Dermansky

Climate advocates during the D.C. protests warned that time is almost up to implement meaningfulย change. Sharon Lavigne, founder of community group RISE St. James from Louisiana, shared her firsthand account of what living with worsening climate impacts is like. Hurricane Ida destroyed her roof, which led to flooding inside her home, leaving it uninhabitable.

Many of the speakers during the five days of action highlighted the Biden administration’s failure to reject projects they say he has the power to stop right now, including the Mountain Valley Pipeline, the Line 3 pipeline, and Formosaโ€™s multi-billion-dollar plastics complex in Louisiana, among others.ย 

An activist holding an anti Mountain Valley Pipeline sign while marching from Freedom Plaza to the White House on the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuels’ protest, October 15, 2021. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Climate activist being led away by the Capitol police on October 15, the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuelsโ€™ protest. Credit: Julie Dermansky

“By refusing to stop major fossil fuel projects, President Biden has broken his promises to protect Indigenous rights, prioritize environmental justice, and fully address the climate crisis,โ€ said an October 15 release from the organizers of the People vs. Fossil Fuels protests. As the press release states, โ€œnew analysisย from Oil Change Internationalย shows that if the Biden Administration moves ahead with 21 major fossil fuel infrastructure projects that are currently under federal review, it would be the emissions equivalent of adding 316 new coal-fired power plants โ€” more than are currently operating in the United States. The total emissions from just these projects would represent 17% of total US greenhouse gas emissions in 2019.โ€ย 

Joye Braun, a member of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe and part of the Indigenous Environmental Network, sitting with Indigenous youth risking arrest on the last day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil Fuelsโ€™ protest. Credit: Julie Dermansky
Biologist and anti-fracking activist Sandra Steingraber urging President Biden to act according to science on day four of the ‘People vs. Fossil Fuels’ protests. Credit: Julie Dermansky

Advocates also warned about false solutions thatย the Biden administration and other Democratic Party centrists are embracing, such asย carbon capture and hydrogen fuel made from natural gas, neither of which are commercially viable technologies. “There is no time for parlor games like blue hydrogen or wolves in sheepsโ€™ clothing like fracking,โ€ Sandra Steingraber, a biologist and author who highlighted the health impacts of living near fracking industry sites, said before she was arrested in front of the White House on October 14. โ€œOr unworkable, fanciful Rube Goldbergโ€“contraptions like carbon capture and storage.โ€ย 

That same day, on October 14, Louisianaโ€™s Gov. John Bell Edwards welcomed a proposed $4.5 billion blue hydrogen clean energy complex. 

The organizers of the D.C. protests have yet to announce their next moves following the five-day action, but the Indigenous activists who were in the streets vowed to do whatever it takes to protect the planet for the next seven generations.

Climate activists taunting the capitol police on October 15, 2021 the final day of the โ€˜People vs. Fossil fuelsโ€™ protest after 90 people were arrested for blocking an intersection near the Capitol. Credit: Julie Dermansky
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Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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