On Trump's second day, thousands of women
to march in D.C. in protest
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[January 21, 2017]
By Emily Stephenson and Scott Malone
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hundreds of
thousands of people from all over the United States are expected to pack
into downtown Washington on Saturday for a women's march in opposition
to the agenda and rhetoric of President Donald Trump.
The Women's March on Washington, featuring speakers, celebrity
appearances and a protest walk along the National Mall, was planned as a
counter-argument to Trump's populist presidential campaign, in which he
angered many on the left with comments seen as demeaning to women,
Mexicans and Muslims.
It comes the day after the nation's capital was rocked by violent
protest against Trump, with black-clad anti-establishment activists
smashing windows, setting vehicles on fire and fighting with
riot-gear-clad police who responded with stun grenades. [L1N1FA0LA]
The protests illustrated the depth of the anger in a deeply divided
country that is still recovering from the scarring 2016 campaign season.
Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton, the first woman nominated for
president by a major U.S. party.
The organizers of Saturday's march said they had extensive security
plans in place, and would have both visible and hard-to-spot security
workers along the route.
The event, the brainchild of Hawaiian grandmother Teresa Shook, was
intended as an outlet for women and men who consider themselves
feminists to vent their frustration and anxiety over Trump's victory. It
spotlights the fierce opposition Trump faces as he takes office, a
period that is typically more of a honeymoon than a hatefest.
A recent ABC News/Washington Post poll found Trump had the lowest
favorability rating of any incoming president since the 1970s.
Women reached by Reuters gave a host of reasons for marching, ranging
from inspiring other women to run for office to protesting Trump's plans
to repeal the 2010 Affordable Care Act, which among other things
requires health insurers to cover birth control.
Overall, the women said they hoped to send a unity message to Trump
after a campaign in which he said Mexican immigrants were "rapists,"
discussed banning Muslims from entering the United States, and was
revealed to have once bragged about grabbing women by the genitals and
kissing them without permission.
"It's a lot of things: To protest the administration that's coming in
and the blatant disrespect for women and people of color," said Whitney
Jordan, 28, who works in retail in New York and said she was coming to
Washington on a bus organized by Planned Parenthood, the reproductive
health organization that is the march's biggest sponsor.
Another march participant, Carli Baklashev, a stay-at-home mother of
five boys from Missouri, said, "I want to resist the ideology of
everything that he stands for and teach my children that, you know,
love, empathy and inclusion and diversity are a staple of who we are.
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People gather in front of the U.S. Embassy on Pariser Platz beside
Brandenburg Gate in solidarity with women's march in Washington and
many other marches in several countries, in Berlin, Germany, January
21, 2017. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke
Trump's team did not respond to a request for comment about the
march.
During his inauguration speech on Friday, Trump vowed to work for
the good of the U.S. worker, saying, "Every decision on trade, on
taxes, on immigration, on foreign affairs, will be made to benefit
American workers and American families."
Celebrities such as the musicians Janelle Monae and Katy Perry -
both of whom supported Clinton in the election - are expected to
take part in Saturday's march. Women have knitted pink cat-eared
"pussy" hats, a reference to Trump's claim in the 2005 video that
was made public weeks before the election that he grabbed women by
the genitals.
Dozens of groups representing myriad issues joined together to
sponsor the march.
Shannon Watts, the head of pro-gun control group Moms Demand Action,
said her organization will send more than 100 marchers.
"Gun violence is a women’s issue," Watts said. She said women in the
United States are 16 times more likely to be the victim of gun
violence than in other high-income nations and that studies have
found 4.5 million women have been threatened at some point with a
gun.
Groups including Emily's List, which supports Democratic women
candidates, said the election had already spurred increased turnout
at classes to train women to mount campaigns for mostly low-level
political offices.
"I want it to be energizing," Erica Eisdorfer, 59, of Carrboro,
North Carolina, said of the march. "Nothing is going to change on
Sunday morning, nothing will have changed ... but I think the people
who wish it were other will be energized."
(Reporting by Emily Stephenson and Ginger Gibson; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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