Paid protesters or professional protesters[a] are people who participate in public outrage or objection in exchange for payment.[1][2] The expression may be directed against individuals, organizations and governments or against protests against the government with the aim of breaking up or discrediting a protest. In some contexts, people may be hired for optics to show increased public participation in the democratic process.[2] Two parliaments have debated paid protesting, the Kyrgyz parliament[1] and the Indian parliament,[3] and allegations without evidence were frequently made by former United States President Donald Trump and his supporters throughout his presidency.[4][5][6]
The larger the crowd, the less likely is it that they entirely consist of professional or paid protesters.[7] Paid protesters may not be aware of the matter in consideration.[8] Similar terms that have been used to refer to similar concepts include paid protest, rent-a-crowd, rent-a-mob, activists-for-hire, protest-on-hire, fake protesters/ fake protests and mercenaries.
Conspiracy theories about paid or professional protesters and coordinated protests by groups like antifa and "global elites" (i.e. George Soros conspiracies or QAnon) were common throughout the presidency of Donald Trump,[9][10][11][12][13] and both right-leaning and left-leaning misinformation circles promote allegations of paid or otherwise organized protesters.[10]
Examples
This section may lack focus or may be about more than one topic. In particular, the section includes cases of apparently proven or uncontroversial cases alongside unproven or false accusations, resulting in confusion as to which of these belong in which of those categories. Please help improve this article, possibly by splitting the section, or discuss this issue on the talk page.(December 2021)
In Kyrgyzstan, the acronym OBON, which expands to "Otryad Bab Osobogo Naznacheniya"[14] in the Kyrgyz language and can be translated as "special-assignment female units", refers to hired female protesters. The benefits of this is that it is a cheap way to populate a protest site as well as reduce the probability of violent confrontation with the police and other security forces.[1] The remuneration for this has also been discussed by Kyrgyzstan media.[1]
In 2018, the Additional Solicitor General of India used the phrase in the Supreme Court of India, "We are in an era where there are some professional protesters who like to protest outside the apex court, Parliament, President’s house or Prime Minister’s house. They don’t like any other alternative place for protests".[19] The Shaheen Bagh protests in India were accused of being a paid protest. The protesters in turn put up posters and conveyed through the media that it was not a paid protest and that the protesters were not doing it for money.[20][21][22]
Former U.S. President Donald Trump often made unfounded claims about paid or professional protesters throughout his presidency.[6][23][24][25][26] For example he used the phrase "professional protesters" in a tweet following protests against his election victory.[4] Similar accusations were made against participants in the Dakota Access Pipeline protests in 2016 and 2017.[27] There have been public claims of organizations such as Crowds on Demand providing paid protesters, or pay for protesting.[28][29][30][31]
In the United Kingdom, concerns and accusations related to paid protests have been reported. During the visit of Tamim al-Thani to London in 2018, a paid protest took place outside Downing Street.[32][33]
Variants
In Indonesia, the term "nasi bungkus brigade" or the "boxed lunch crowd" has been coined to refer to paid protesters.[2][34] The Hindi phrase andolan jeevis translates to "protest lifeforms". The phrase was used by the Indian Prime Minister in the parliament of India.[35]
^Not to be confused with professionals who protest.
Citations
^ abcdKim, Alexander; Osmonalieva, Asyl; Sikorskaya, Inga; Rasulov, Bakhtiyor (6 January 2012). "Rent-a-Mob Protests in Central Asia". Institute for War and Peace Reporting. Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
^Marat, Erica (2018-03-01). "5: Kyrgyzstan". The Politics of Police Reform: Society against the State in Post-Soviet Countries. Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-086151-3.