Politics

Loud protest at White House aims to push Biden into taking action against Cuba

Cuban Americans held a large rally outside the White House overnight from Sunday into Monday in a noisy bid to rouse President Biden to action against the island’s Communist leaders.

Biden, who returned to the White House from his home of Delaware around 4 p.m. Sunday, might have been able to hear the ruckus from his second-floor residence.

“Libertad! Libertad!” a group of hundreds chanted after dark on Pennsylvania Avenue in a video tweeted by Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-Fla.).

The Miami Herald reported that the White House’s outdoor lights — red, white and blue to mark the Tokyo Olympics — were shut off at midnight, but that the rally continued into early Monday.

People rally in support of continued anti-government protests in Cuba on Pennsylvania Avenue outside the White House on July 25, 2021, in Washington, DC. Getty Images
A protester dresses as the Statue of Liberty as others wear Cuban flags during a demonstration in front of the White House in Washington, DC, on July 25, 2021. AFP via Getty Images

Many of the rally-goers drove to DC in caravans from Florida.

Loud protests can be unnerving to occupants of the White House. For example, an initial night of anti-police brutality protests in May 2020 after the killing of George Floyd in Minnesota prompted President Donald Trump to inspect an underground bunker.

White House spokespeople did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether Biden could hear the protest as he tried to sleep.

A cardboard cutout of President Biden is placed against a fence during a demonstration in front of the White House. AFP via Getty Images
Protesters demand action outside the White House. Getty Images
A protester wearing a Cuba hat is seen in front of the White House gate. Getty Images

First lady Jill Biden wasn’t home. She returned to the White House around 8 a.m. Monday after a trip to Japan for the Olympics.

Anti-Communist Cubans have rallied outside the White House consistently since the largest anti-government protests in a generation broke out this month.

Biden on Thursday authorized sanctions against one Cuban official and a Cuban government agency to punish a crackdown on protesters.

Critics have called on the commander-in-chief to do more amid the suppression of protests — and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) told The Post last week that Republicans are weighing legislation to force the president’s hand.

Biden previously said the US is investigating whether it’s technically possible to override an internet blackout imposed by Communist authorities. The lack of internet access prevents distribution of information on protests.