A day after the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump, millions nationwide and around the world marched in support of women’s rights.
• Huge crowds converge on flagship Washington march.
• Hundreds of thousands at Los Angeles march alone
• Did you march? Tell us why.
• See the marches around the world.
Fox News gives minimal coverage to women’s march and reinstates media divide
The three main cable news networks may have been equal in their wall-to-wall coverage of Friday’s inauguration and its festivities, but during Saturday’s coverage of the Women’s March on Washington, the historical divide between Fox News and its compatriots was firmly reinstated.
CNN, MSNBC and Fox News were all dinged by many viewers for choosing to open their Saturday morning coverage with footage of newly minted President Trump at the National Prayer Service rather than the estimated 500,000 marchers.
But by midmorning, while CNN and MSNBC had turned their multi-screened attention to the throngs of protesters, Fox, which had drawn a tweet of praise from the president for its coverage of the inauguration, continued to do just that.
Showing shots of the White House, Fox recapped the previous day’s events, discussed the swearing-in of the secretary of Defense and reported on the Trump family’s bowling in their new Pennsylvania Avenue home.
As the day wore on and millions marched and rallied around the country, commentators at MSNBC and CNN repeatedly expressed surprise at the number of people involved and invited a wide range of conversation about what such an event could mean for the country.
A look at some of the protests that changed U.S. history (and others that didn’t)
Like a great pink-capped wave, rolling from one edge of the country to the other, more than a million protesters marched through the streets of America on Saturday in an unprecedented show of discontent scarcely a day into the new Trump administration.
From resort towns like Bend, Ore., to the skyscraper-lined streets of New York City, it was an outpouring that surely gladdened critics of President Trump and lifted the faint spirits of Democrats crushed by his upset victory.
But once the protest signs come down and buoyant marchers tuck their “pussy hats” away in their closets, what remains is a stark reality facing the left-leaning throngs: a government in Washington run by the GOP and more than 30 state capitals where Republicans enjoy unchecked control.
Politically, that is the kind of breakwater that can dash the strongest wave.
How well did Los Angeles work during Saturday’s Women’s March? Our architecture critic’s report card
Any big political march is both a test of a city’s spatial limitations and an exercise in seeing and using that city in a new way. This may be especially true in Los Angeles, a city still trying to shake off an outdated reputation as a place without a significant pedestrian culture or vibrant public realm.
The Los Angeles edition of Saturday’s women’s march was in that sense another sign of the city’s continuing effort to redefine, or at least recalibrate, its public-ness.
What really struck me Saturday as I watched the march descend on Pershing Square and make its way to the foot of City Hall, was how certain spaces and corridors absorbed the unusual mass of humanity far better than others. The LAPD called it the largest gathering downtown since the immigration rights protests of 2006, attracting “hundreds of thousands” of people, according to multiple media reports.
At several moments, bottlenecks of these masses suggested overtaxed spaces and an inadequate infrastructure (and maybe also imperfect planning for the march itself). Other times, the crowd moved easily from one block to the next.
As I stood crowded in by a mass of marchers, it wasn’t difficult to think that ‘radical flatness’ would be an improvement in handling crowds of this size.
All morning, from what I could see, the marchers were jovial and relaxed, even when they seemed hopelessly stuck.
My short-form report card reads this way: low to middling marks for Metro and Pershing Square, high ones for Grand Park.
Bras hung from trees outside the Women’s March, and other forms of feminine protest
The trees were filled with bras outside the Women’s March on Washington. Behind the rally stage, branches were draped with brassiers, presumably from the participants in the march.
“Enough is enough! Stop the war on women. Leave Medicare, Medicaid and Planned Parenthood alone!!!” read one sign. “Resist!” said another.
Bras weren’t the only feminine intimate product used to send messages. Marchers wrote notes of protest on women’s sanitary pads that were affixed to a wall. Among the messages: “Women’s rights are human rights!” “My body, my choice!” “Nasty women fight orange trolls.” And with a drawing of a wire hanger, “Never again!”
‘With every drop of blood and every tear’: The artists who took to the streets for the L.A. women’s march
It is often artists who are a public voice of opposition. And artists need to bring that voice of opposition to this cause — with every drop of blood and every tear.
— Catherine Opie, artist
They began to gather just after 7 a.m. Saturday at the Good Luck Gallery, a small art space on Chung King Road in Los Angeles’ Chinatown. Owner Paige Wery, who showcases the work of outsider artists, threw open the doors in advance of the women’s march in Los Angeles to offer artists, friends and colleagues a base from which to attend the downtown action.
She also offered hot coffee, a bathroom and a table full of art supplies — so that last-minute arrivals could produce protest posters.
Paul Kopeikin, who runs Culver City’s Kopeikin Gallery, showed up with boxes of doughnuts and a fabric sign on his back that read “Not My President.”
“I think artists feel they belong to a group that is directly affected,” said Kopeikin, bearing a placard that reads “Unity!”
Read More----------------
Carolina A. Miranda has spent inauguration weekend following L.A.’s cultural institutions big and small to see how they are responding -- or not -- to the beginning of the Trump administration. Here are some of her other dispatches:
The Actors’ Gang joins theater world’s national call to create light for ‘dark times’
The L.A. artist who lip-synced Donald Trump’s inauguration speech as a clown
Artist R.H. Quaytman blocks public access to her MOCA painting in protest of Trump inauguration
A free comic offers artist ‘Resist!’-ance at the Hammer Museum
Artist Edgar Arceneaux on inauguration day at LACMA recalls Reagan’s inaugural gala
Abraham Lincoln was at the Women’s March on Washington. See who else was there
Huge crowds converge on the nation’s capital for Women’s March on Washington.
Gloria Steinem on Women’s March participants: ‘I think I just had to wait for some of my friends to be born’
The Women’s March on Washington may have been filled with celebrities, singers and all sorts of Hollywood A-listers, but it was longtime feminist and writer Gloria Steinem who really revved up the crowd.
Upon exiting the Women’s March after her keynote speech in which she emphasized that protest means more than hitting the “send” button, a crowd formed around Steinem. Mothers rushed up to introduce their daughters to her; protesters held out their signs for her autograph.
Even California’s Wendy Carrillo seemed excited to tell Steinem that she she is a candidate to replace Xavier Becerra in the 34th Congressional District. “I’m running!” Carrillo exclaimed.
We spoke with Steinem briefly and asked her to elaborate on the speech she gave during Saturday’s rally.
“We’re doing it,” Steinem said. “Pressing send does not allow us to empathize with other people. ... If you hold a baby you’re flooded with empathy. If you see somebody in an accident you want to help them. I love books, but [empathy] doesn’t happen from a book. It doesn’t happen from a screen. It only happens when we’re together.”
As for the day itself, Steinem appeared to be elated. “I think I just had to wait for some of my friends to be born,” she remarked.
And as the day turned to dusk, a flock of fans from behind the police barricades still chanted, “Glor-i-a, Glor-i-a.”
Watch Steinem’s speech below:
London women gathered at Trafalgar Square
The atmosphere was jubilant at the London Women’s March as protesters walked through the capital loudly chanting “Build bridges not walls,” and “Stand united, we will never be divided.”
The signs held aloft against the election of President Donald Trump ranged from angry to comical.
“We shall overcomb,” said one of them, with a handwritten drawing of the new White House resident’s unruly hair.
The march began at the U.S. Embassy at about noon and wound its way to Trafalgar Square, where there was a rally and speeches.
Traffic was diverted, and there was a heavy police presence but a deep sense of solidarity and sisterhood among those present -- which included a large number of men and children as well as women of all ages.
“Things are really bad, we are really going backwards,” said Londoner Amy Woodrow Arai, 38, who attended with her mother, partner and 18-month-old son. “Thought this was going to be tough, but the atmosphere was really positive. It was so moving to see so many women there.”
London mayor Sadiq Khan attended, along with local politicians. Singer Lilly Allen was also among the crowds.
Labor MP Harriet Harman said Trump’s victory caused real concerns that fundamental rights would regress.
“This is a very important antidote to feeling passively disempowered and a sense that things are going to be pushed back,” she said.
Temperatures hovered around freezing for much of the day with bright blue skies overhead.
Organizers said up to 100,00 people attended, but police did not release official figures.
The art of the satirical sign on display along the Mall
Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez captured these images of the people and placards along the Woman’s March route in Washington.
Even in New York, hardly anybody ever saw a day like this
New Yorkers were struggling to to remember when there might have been more people out on the streets than during Saturday’s woman’s march -- perhaps back in 1982, when there was a huge anti-nuclear protest, or during the marches against the Vietnam War, or more recently, after the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Organizers estimated the crowd Saturday at 250,000, about four times what had been expected, and some police officers said they thought it was larger.
Women and men, girls and boys, more people than even jaded New Yorkers could imagine, gridlocked the streets and sidewalks from Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza near the United Nations, jamming 42nd Street and Fifth Avenue as they headed up to Trump Tower, the permanent residence of the newly inaugurated president.
The soaring atrium of Grand Central Station was filled with balloons, signs and people in costume. “This was the Woodstock of your generation,’’ a 73-year-old retiree, John Molanphy, said while riding home on the subway in a hand-knitted pink hat. “I’d been to big demonstrations before in New York, but nothing like this.’’
The atmosphere was friendly. There was no sign of riot gear anywhere. Marchers waved at police and police often waved back. In front of Trump Tower, a march organizer balanced a loudspeaker on the roof of a police car to cheer on marchers while a police officer helped hold it in place.
To a large extent, the march had the blessing of the city leadership under Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio.
“Look around you. We are together. We are united. We are always New York. Let’s march,’’ roared Chirline McCray, the mayor’s wife, who opened the rally at the beginning of the march.
In addition to official power, there was plenty of star power: Rosie Perez, Whoopi Goldberg, Helen Mirren and Taylor Schilling of “Orange is the New Black.’’
Although Donald Trump is a native New Yorker, many in his hometown aren’t fans.
“We hate him because we know him,’’ said Nadine Hoffman, a veteran activist.
No surprise, since New York is one of the creative capitals of the country, the march turned into an outdoor art gallery of imaginative posters, many of them featuring cats (a reference to a video leaked during the campaign in which Trump referred to female anatomy), and others with coat hangers (a reference to fears that women will be forced to return to the days of illegal abortions.)
A few samples of those that were clean enough for a family newspaper.
“You can’t comb over corruption.”
@fakesign. Highly overrated.
Just say Nyet.
It appeared there were nearly as many men as women in the crowds.
One man carried a sign that read, “I’m with her and her and her and her and her.”
Another carried a young baby in a backpack with an attached sign that read, “My papa is a feminist.”
Jesse Jackson photobombs Cher interview at Women’s March on Washington
Cher appeared at the Women’s March on Washington to lend her support to the movement sparked by the reaction to Donald Trump’s election.
“I want to let people know that I’m here for them and I believe in this movement,” she said. “I want people to go away from here and join organizations and keep protesting.”
When asked how she as an artist will reflect the change she wants to see in America, she said, “I want to protest. I want to speak up. I want to lend my name. I want to do everything that’s possible that I can think of. I’m just so astonished that everybody came.”
At that point, an old friend of Cher’s stuck his head into the shot and joked that maybe he should open her next show. It was civil rights leader Jesse Jackson.
“We’ve known each other forever,” Cher said with delight.
When Jackson was asked how many Cher concerts he’d been to, he slyly said, “Since I was a kid.”
This brought out a big laugh from Cher, who hit Jackson on the chest and teased, “Since you were a kid!”
They both laughed together and then moved off into the crowd.
See the full video below:
Cher and Jesse Jackson at the Women’s March on Washington.
An organizer of 2006 immigration march speaks out: Today’s crowd is younger, more diverse
Jorge Rodriguez, 64, has been involved in civil rights movements since he was a teenager. He participated in demonstrations to protest immigration raids and to call for amnesty for immigrants living in the country illegally during the 1970s and 80s.
Rodriguez, who lives in South Pasadena, was also one of the organizers of the immigrant-rights protest of 2006 that drew an estimated 500,000 people.
Glancing at the sea of people that stretched from First Street to Grand Avenue, Rodriguez said he noticed the crowd was younger.
“It’s great,” he said. “The fact that there’s more women here is a testament of the resistance, and it’s not just women, but families.”
Rodriguez said the crowd was also more diverse than the 2006 immigration march.
“I knew it was going to be a big march because people are upset and they want to fight,” he said. “People won’t want their rights taken away.”
Rodriguez is hoping that the march will inspire people to find ways to fight against injustice and hold elected officials accountable.
“I have hope,” he said. “There’s a new generation that is stepping up to stop injustice.”
The march in Washington is winding down
Indigenous women were among the last to sing along Constitution Ave.
The women’s march has seriously wound down. Several hundred demonstrators are still massed in front of the White House, but Constitution Ave. has finally been cleared.
The final contingent to march on Constitution was an indigenous women’s group, Indigenous Women Rise, that sang while marching before coming to a stop in front of the White House and giving prayer.
After giving each other hugs, the women melted away, and police vehicles began to drive through the street and urge stragglers to get back on the sidewalks.
Las Vegas marcher says Trump made a bad bet against Obamacare
Amanda Grossi, a freelance translator, was in danger of losing her jobs because she couldn’t afford glasses. Then came the Affordable Care Act. Suddenly, seeing her work was within sight.
“People forget that basic needs like glasses allow me to work and contribute taxes and not be a burden on the system,” Grossi said at the Women’s March in Las Vegas on Saturday. “It’s an investment.”
The 28-year-old was upset when President Trump signed an executive order Friday to “ease the burden” of the act known as Obamacare.
Being a Las Vegas native, she thought the best way to make a statement at the march was to let Trump know he was making a bad bet. So she borrowed her sister’s Halloween costume – a queen of hearts – and made a sign that read “Don’t gamble with women’s health.”
Grossi said everything from Planned Parenthood services to just being able to get prescription glasses was too important to the economy to jettison now.
She was one of about 4,000 people marching down Fremont Street, past the El Cortez Casino, a few bars with late-night revelers who were now late-morning stragglers, and the Wee Kirk O’ The Heather Wedding Chapel. They stopped in front of Foley Federal Building on Las Vegas Boulevard, with the iconic Stratosphere Hotel and Casino as a backdrop.
Grossi said marching made her feel like she was making a statement the day after Trump “took away my voice.”
But she said the march had to be just the beginning. She hoped people would work to get Democrats elected in the mid-term elections in 2018 and gain control of Congress.
She then held up her sign and joined the crowd in chanting,
“justice, peace and equality for all — stronger together we won’t fall.”
Call to arms from the National Mall: ‘Tweet all people kindly’
Several times at the Women’s March, I couldn’t move left, or right, forward or back.
Women, and more than a few men, swarmed onto the National Mall from every direction to march in protest of Donald Trump on his second day as president.
Speaking of crowd size, it should surprise no one that Trump spent part of the day moaning about crowd estimates for his Friday inauguration.
In more ways than one, size matters to Trump.
He must have looked out the window at some point and noticed that the protest march appeared larger than the celebration march, and he took a shot at the media for getting it wrong, calling reporters dishonest.
Among our sins, he said, we falsely accused him of having feuded with American intelligence agencies.
We did?
This from the guy who compared American CIA officers to Nazis.
“This is what democracy looks like,” marchers chanted throughout the day.
Although women’s issues were central to the Women’s March, demonstrators were there because of concerns including environmental policy, bigotry and immigration.
A man seated in a medical chair held up a sign that said: “Mock me to my face.”
“Make America think again,” said another sign.
Dean Cannon, 8, from Atlanta, held up a message for the new president: “Tweet All People Kindly.”
Bob and Mary Helen Harris sat on a bench at the end of the march holding a sign:
“Been Marching Since 1963.”
“Trump has been frankly frightening, with his demagoguery and misogyny,” said Bob, a retired Presbyterian minister.
They said this wouldn’t be their last march.
In Israel, marchers criticize talk of moving U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem
Standing in a chilly sea breeze, hundreds of American expatriate demonstrators gathered outside the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv to protest what they described as President Trump’s slights against women and minorities.
Demonstrators were careful to keep the focus local, though, singing Hebrew prayers for peace, protesting Trump’s promise to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, and holding up signs critical of the new president’s emerging bromance with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“The question is what we in Israel can do as an act of resistance against Trump,’’ said Larry Derfner, a left-wing blogger and columnist. “I would say that any act of protest, of getting in people’s faces, against the Netanyahu administration and the occupation is by direct extension an act of resistance.”
Derfner also slammed Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Israel, real estate lawyer David Friedman, for referring to the liberal American Jewish political advocacy group J-Street as “kapos.”
“We have to organize a boycott of him,’’ said Derfner, an Israeli American.
Speakers called on the crowd to express solidarity with Palestinians in Israel and in the West Bank who have had homes demolished by Israeli authorities.
Evan Kent, a 56-year-old Jerusalem resident and former cantor at Temple Isaiah in West Los Angeles, said he made the trip to Tel Aviv to support demonstrators in the U.S. and around the world. He said he was disturbed that Trump’s victory is emboldening Israel’s right-wing government.
“The right wing in Israel has formed an alliance with Trump, thinking he’s giving them an imprimatur to be more right-wing, it’s a little disconcerting,’’ he said. “Trump’s personality indicates he will only do what’s best for him, and not what’s best for Israel. The people who think he’s best for Israel are sadly delusional.’’
L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti: ‘It doesn’t matter who is at the top, it matters what we do at the bottom’
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti revved up the crowd at the women’s march, telling them: “Don’t be afraid.”
“It doesn’t matter who is at the top,” Garcetti said, drawing raucous cheers. “It matters what we do at the bottom.”
The mayor, who campaigned for Hilary Clinton during the election, said the fight would continue for abortion rights, same-sex marriage and affordable healthcare.
“Today we speak out, but tomorrow we act out,” Garcetti said.
The mayor is seeking a second and final term in the March city election.
Obama’s favorite professor spotted at downtown L.A. women’s march
Roger Boesche, who taught Barack Obama in 1979, was among the throngs of demonstrators who participated in the women’s march in downtown L.A.
Boesche, 68, now wheelchair-bound and still teaching at Occidental College, was steered through the crowd by his two nieces, his sister-in-law and brother-in-law, as well as two close friends, who all flanked him protectively as they inched their way up Olive Street amid a densely packed crowd.
“He was Obama’s favorite politics professor!” boasted his sister-in-law. “This is a march for everyone, and we’ll keep going” for the next four years.
Here’s an aerial view of the massive turnout at the women’s march in L.A.
The massive gathering is said to be the largest in a decade.
Crowds chanting in downtown L.A.: ‘Can’t build a wall, hands too small!’
A day of passionate protest across the globe: Here’s a look at the march in Washington and other cities
The tally of women and their supporters marching in Washington is now thought to be close to half a million, an enormous, raucous rally intended to send a potent message of defiance to newly inaugurated President Trump — a gathering so huge that it overspilled its banks like a river in a show of strength, solidarity and joyful chaos.
Other gatherings around the country also have grown to unexpected size, forcing organizers to veer off planned routes or stand in place to chant and cheer, rather than marching as planned.
Marches were underway in an estimated 673 “sister” cities — a total of up to 2.5 million protesters, organizers said, in cities all over Europe and in Kenya, South Africa and Australia.
Here’s an overview of the day’s events:
Woman says her father, an avid Trump supporter, is proud of her for joining women’s march
Brittany Ibañez said participating in the march has brought her closer to her father, an avid Trump supporter.
They try not to talk about politics with one another, but tensions still flare. He has a hard time respecting her opinions. He does, however, respect that she marched in the streets of Los Angeles, proving that she is more than “just talk.”
“He kept saying how proud of me he was, that I’m standing up for what I believe in,” said Ibanez, 31, who works in the mortgage industry, wiping away tears as she spoke of her father.
Around her was a sea of people punctuated by bright pink splashes from hats, scarves, jackets and signs in the traditionally feminine color that has become a symbol of defiance.
Some said being in a large crowd of like-minded people was an antidote to the depression they felt on Friday when Trump was inaugurated. The march has helped them transform despair into action, they said.
“It’s going to be a revival of the ‘60s, and I’m going to be a part of it,” said Anna Vastano, 57, a retired social worker. “I’m not going to sit back and in 20 years have my grandchildren say, why didn’t I do something?”
‘We’re all in the same boat,’ John Lewis tells rain-soaked crowd in Atlanta
Marie Provence was determined to voice her opposition to Donald Trump’s presidency, so when she woke up Saturday morning to roaring thunderstorms and lightning, she was not put off: “NASTY SOAKING WET WOMAN” she wrote on a large piece of cardboard, carefully wrapping her homemade sign in plastic.
Trump’s inauguration speech really made her angry, the 28-year-old graphic designer said as she stood in a red raincoat in downtown Atlanta. “He sounded like a dictator.”
Tens of thousands of marchers braved torrential rain and tornado warnings to gather outside the Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta’s March for Social Justice and Women. Organizers stressed it was not a protest, but a “display of solidarity.”
U.S. Rep. John Lewis, the Georgia civil rights icon who skipped Friday’s inauguration, kicked off the proceedings.
“We all came to this land in different ships but we’re all in the same boat now,” Lewis told the crowd, to loud whoops and cheers. “Got on your marching shoes? Let’s do it!”
The mood was light, even playful, as the crowd marched past CNN headquarters to the Georgia Capitol, chanting “Love, not hate, will make America great” and waving signs that said such things as, “KEEP YOUR TINY HANDS OFF US” and “YOU CAN’T COMB OVER MISOGYNY.”
Many wrapped their placards and banners in plastic wrap; others displayed them under clear umbrellas and ponchos.
“This is a little bit cathartic,” said Amy Hilton, a 46-year-old management consultant, as she gazed across a sea of multicolored raincoats and banners. “It’s important to voice our dissent and stand against this man who doesn’t represent us.”
Who started the march? One woman
She only had three minutes on stage Saturday to address the hundreds of thousands who lined the Mall in Washington but it was enough to leave Teresa Shook ecstatic.
“I’m overwhelmed with joy. A negative has been turned into a positive. All these people coming together to unite to try and make a difference. That’s what we’re going to be doing for the next four years. I see it’s really going to happen.”
The Women’s March on Washington all started with a Facebook invite. And Shook, a resident of Hawaii who goes by “Maui cooper slim” online, is the women who started it all with the click of a button.
Frustrated by the 2016 election results, Shook invited 40 of her friends to a March on Washington. When she awoke the next morning 10,000 additional names had joined the group and there were 10,000 interested in coming.
Did Shook foresee this all culminating in Saturday’s march? “I hoped but no,” Shook said. “That night I just did it because it made me feel better in the moment. I hoped that people would get on board.”
With a D.C. crowd estimated at 500,000 and more than 600 marches around the country, clearly they did.
Teresa Shook, who helped organize the Women’s March on Washington, shares her reaction to the turnout.
‘I chose “Nasty” ’: A woman’s first protest in Seattle
Andi Buescher participates in the women’s march in Seattle.
Andi Buescher came alone to the women’s march in Seattle, and doing so required some effort.
She woke early at her home in Bremerton, Wash., took the hourlong ferry across Puget Sound, arrived downtown and then walked more than two miles across the city’s steep hills toward Judkins Park, where an advance rally was being held.
“This is the first time I’ve even done something like this,” said Buescher, 35. “But I’m kind of inspired and moved to be a little more involved. I was skeptical about coming alone, but said, [forget] it, I’m going to go. And it’s kind of moving to see everybody coming together for something like this. Everybody’s been really friendly.”
Buescher, who moved to Bremerton from Los Angeles last year, said she supported Bernie Sanders in the California primary in June and voted for Hillary Clinton in November because she was “the lesser of two evils? I don’t know.”
She refused to watch or even read about Donald Trump’s inauguration on Friday.
“Looking at his Cabinet picks, I just don’t see this going a good way,” she said. “I hope I’m wrong. I don’t think I am, but I hope I am.
“I’m here because of my own rights as a woman, including my reproductive rights,” she said, adding that she was particularly frustrated with Republican efforts to cut funding to Planned Parenthood.
“Planned Parenthood is not an abortion factory. It’s the reason I never had abortions in the first place. And I want equal rights for everybody — every race, every gender — just rights.”
Buescher came empty-handed, other than carrying a camera. But by the time she arrived at the march, she had a simple sign with one work taped to the back of her yellow raincoat: “NASTY.”
“I didn’t have any sign, and I don’t own anything pink. Someone on the ferry was handing out signs. And they had ‘Nasty,’ ‘The future is female,’ ‘Women’s rights are human rights,’ and I chose ‘Nasty.’ ”
Mexico City marchers demand rights for women and migrants
Hundreds of protesters—including women, men and children-- took to the streets of the Mexican capital Saturday to defend women’s rights and assail President Trump.
“We demand an end to the misogyny of Trump, to his discriminatory politics,” said Estela Ruiz, 27, a lawyer who was among the 500 or so who gathered in front on the U.S. Embassy and later at the nearby Angel of Independence monument. “But this is a demand not only for the rights of women, but also of migrants, a shout against his discriminatory, misogynistic and macho ideas.”
During his campaign, Trump often targeted Mexico, threatening to step up deportations of illegal immigrants, build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and slap tariffs on Mexican goods exported to the United States.
There is considerable fear that Trump’s prospective policies could trigger an economic meltdown in Mexico, where the economy is heavily dependent on cross-border trade and cash sent home from Mexican nationals residing in the United States. But many march participants focused not on potential economic impacts but rather on what they labeled Trump’s anti-women and anti-migrant agenda.
“Trump should listen loud and clear: We are not going to allow his discriminatory politics,” said Carmela Paredes, 42, a university professor. “We are not going to allow his attacks against women, against gays, against migrants.”
Added Clara Zamora, 21, a student: “If he [Trump] thinks there will be no consequences, he is mistaken: We women are ready and prepared to confront him.”
This is possibly the cutest view of the Los Angeles women’s march
‘Carrie Fisher sent me’: These are the signs people brought with them to the women’s march in Washington
Signs at the Women’s March on Washington
Police: Downtown L.A. march appears to draw largest crowd since 2006 immigration protest
Authorities are still working on a crowd estimate for the women’s march, but officials said it appears to be the largest since the famous 2006 immigrant-rights protest in downtown L.A.
The Los Angeles Police Department estimated that march to have drawn 500,000 people, but organizers insisted the number was higher.
“There is a sea of humanity everywhere,” Los Angeles police Capt. Andrew Neiman said of the women’s march.
‘It’s ours to change’: Uzo Aduba with ‘What Meryl said’ sign appears at Women’s March on Washington
Actress Uzo Aduba was at the Women’s March on Washington on Saturday holding a sign that read, “What Meryl said.”
The reference, of course, was to Meryl Streep’s provocative acceptance speech for lifetime achievement at the Golden Globe awards. We stopped Aduba and asked, “How are you as an artist going to reflect the change you want to see in America?”
“Its taking action,” she said. “The best example would be the Obamas. The most progressive and aggressive thing, I think, [was] taking their public position and taking it to the private sector so quickly and effectively with the Obama Foundation.
“He was so smart to realize that he has activated an entire group of people, like myself when I first became a donor when I had no money whatsoever. And realizing the power that we each have as individuals to be activated on a daily basis.
“It’s ours to change. We actually don’t necessarily need to have massive coalitions, massive groups or bodies of government. We the people are able to advance and make change. So I want to live my change daily.”
Marchers in Germany have a message: Trump, sir, is no Berliner
In Berlin, about 1,000 women demonstrated for about an hour on a chilly Saturday afternoon in front of the U.S. Embassy in the heart of Berlin, next to the Brandenburg Gate. There were smaller rallies in Munich and Frankfurt.
Many in the crowd in Berlin, the country’s capital and largest city, were Americans living in the city.
“No hate, no fear,” they chanted at the rally, held in solidarity with the march in Washington. “We are unstoppable, a better world is possible.”
One woman was holding a sign that read: “Trump ist kein Berliner,” (Trump is not a Berliner) — a reference to John F. Kennedy’s 1963 “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech of solidarity for West Berlin.
Many Germans and others living in Berlin are particularly worried about what they believe is a growing threat of global tensions with Donald Trump as president. Because of its belligerent 20th century past and the destruction caused by World War II, many Germans are especially attuned to any early indications of international friction.
“Make America Afraid Again” read the slogan on one poster that featured a picture of Trump and mocked his “Make America Great Again” rallying cry.
Other signs read “Nope” with a picture of Trump’s face that was similar to the “Yes, we can” posters hoisted during former U.S. President Barack Obama’s campaign. There were other signs with messages reading “No to sexism,” ’’Women’s rights are human rights” and “Our bodies, our minds, our power.”
Amy Schumer, Madonna, W.H. Auden and f-bombs on the Mall in Washington
Around hour six, the crowds lining the Mall in Washington needed a little pick-me-up, which they got when Amy Schumer took the stage, albeit briefly. While fans screamed, Schumer expressed her pride in being at the march and then proceeded to introduce the next celebrity guest.
“Ladies and ladies,” she said. “Madonna!”
Indeed it was she, wearing a black version of the march’s signature “pussyhat,” calling for a “revolution of love” and dressing down anyone unimpressed by the event.
“To the detractors who say this march will not add up to anything,” she had a staccato repetition of signature obscenity that sent CNN and MSNBC into sudden cuts and apologetic damage control. (C-SPAN, on the other hand, was not bothered.)
F-bombs weren’t the only sort of explosive statements on the star’s mind. She admitted that she had had thoughts of “blowing up the White House” before realizing “that won’t change anything.”
Switching gears, or maybe not, she quoted W.H. Auden: “We must love one another or die.”
Then, of course, she sang “Express Yourself.”
Canadian man wears heels to downtown L.A. women’s march to ‘walk a mile in her shoes’
Dean Heezen was in town from Canada for work and decided to buy a pair of red heels to wear during the women’s march.
Along the route, the 26-year-old clutched a sign that read: “Walk a mile in her shoes.”
“Power to you for walking in heels,” one woman told him.
“Power to you for wearing them,” he replied.
“I don’t know how women do it,” Heezen added. “But if they can walk in them everyday, then I can walk in them for a little bit.”
California marcher: ‘I wanted to use my white-straight-Christian woman privilege’ to help vulnerable voices be heard
Desta Goehner, 40, of Thousand Oaks, said she made the trek from California to the Women’s March in Washington, D.C., because she wanted to be there with her best friends — and to stand up for her daughter and anyone who is vulnerable.
“I wanted to use my white-straight-Christian woman privilege to stand here to help other voices that are vulnerable be heard,” Goehner said.
Virginia Matzek, 47, an environmental scientist from Davis who described herself as a liberal, brought along her two sons, 14 and 16. They attended President Trump’s inauguration on Friday to see the turnout, and noted that it appeared small.
“The crowd was puny,” said Matzek, a professor at Santa Clara University. “I hope [Trump] knows his ratings are poor.”
Matzek said she has been unhappy when Republicans won the White House in the past, but she never felt fear as she did after Trump’s victory.
“In the past, I at least believed the opposition party would obey the norms of democracy. I thought they were good people who I disagreed with on policy,” she said. “In Trump, we elected a proto-fascist. He is not a good person. He is not fit for office. He is not fit for humanity.”
Michelle Pierson of Van Nuys and Nicole Myers of Woodland Hills decided they had to participate in the Women’s March the day after the election. Their husbands took off work to care for their children so the two women could spend the week protesting in the nation’s capital.
“We had to do something to deal with our frustration, our sadness, our rage,” said Pierson, 38, a stay-at-home mom.
Myers, 40, owns a picture-framing shop. She said she was thinking of her 10-year-old son at the march.
“I don’t want him to think someone could speak like that and be president.”
See the massive crowd gathering at Los Angeles City Hall
Tens of thousands march in Sacramento: ‘This is one of the most important moments for our democracy’
The crowd for the women’s march in Sacramento swelled to nearly 30,000 participants, according to one police officer, and they carried colorful signs and chanted, “Fired up. Ready to go.”
Laura Gibson and her 17-year-old daughter, Lydia, wore bright pink, cat-eared hats with a group of other mothers and daughters. They drove in from Redding “because we couldn’t sit still,” said Laura Gibson, 44.
After marching from Southside Park to the Capitol grounds, Sue Martens, 63, said she was excited to see so many young people taking to the streets. She protested in the Vietnam era and found it necessary to protest today, she said.
“This is one of the most important moments for our democracy,” she said.
Sally Dunn, 64, a homeless advocate from Fresno, passed out copies of a community newspaper. She said she came to the Capitol to demand equal access to housing and healthcare. The issues are huge for her, she said, because she has a daughter with lupus and is supporting another who has breast cancer.
“The struggle is real,” she said. “You have to fight for what you want. We have to stand up now or forever hold our peace.”
Three generations of women march proudly in Washington’s ‘beautiful scene of positivity’
The marchers flooding Constitution Avenue seemed to represent the vast expanse of modern America: women and men, white and black, Christian and Muslim, young and old.
One small group included three generations of women and girls from the same family, marching together while proudly clutching colorful signs.
Jessica Parker Coleman, 56, holding a sign that said, “Save the middle class,” had decided to come up from Georgia to join the march with her daughter, Amber Coleman-Mortley, 34, and Amber’s daughters, Naima, 7, Sofia, 5, and Garvey, 8.
“When I heard about this one, I wanted to come right away,” Parker Coleman said, adding, “we need positivity back in our country.” And what she beheld as marchers peacefully streamed past her family, she said, was “a beautiful scene of positivity.”
For Coleman-Mortley, who lives in Washington, D.C., the march was a teachable moment for her own daughters.
“I want my kids to see that peaceful protest, and that peaceful dissent, is OK,” Coleman-Mortley said. It was also personal. “Being a black woman, I’m at the place where race and gender issues are my problem. It’s just important for me to come out here to address that — ‘Hey, I matter.’ ”
Before she continued marching, she held up her sign: “435 House seats, 33 Senate seats, 36 governorships. Don’t like it? Vote 2018.”
Are you marching? Tell us why
“Because there are still too many people who want to pull us back, and I want to move forward,” Janey Wong, who’s marching in Portland, Ore., wrote us.
Tell us why you’re marching, and read what other people are saying.
Cory Booker: Women’s march is ‘not a Republican or Democrat thing. This is something we can all unify around’
Sen. Cory Booker interview at Women’s March on Washington
New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker believes the women’s march represents bipartisan issues.
“This is about responding to misogyny, bigotry, racism — all of those things that are undermining who we are,” he said in Washington, D.C.
“This is not a Democrat or Republican thing. This is actually something we can all unify around.”
Tens of thousands are marching in Texas
In Houston, police estimated the crowd for the women’s march had swelled to 20,000 people, much larger than expected.
As many as 30,000 were marching in Austin, blocking a major intersection.
Abdul and Danielle Sule, 25 and 26, respectively, attended the march with relatives. They worried what a Trump presidency would mean for them.
It’s not so much about attacking a person or what happened this past election so much as about protecting minority groups.
— Abdul Sule, Houston resident
Kamala Harris: The women’s march is ‘absolutely personal to me’
Sen. Kamala Harris interview at Women’s March on Washington
Sen. Kamala Harris (D-California) was “walking on a cloud” after speaking to thousands at the women’s march in Washington.
Her message: All issues are women’s issues.
“We will not retreat when being attacked. We will stand up and we will fight.”
California’s newest Democratic senator reflected on Trump’s inauguration speech just the day before, calling it a “dark” message for Americans.
“I am concerned that we are on a path to appeal to our lesser instincts instead of our better selves,” she said.
She went on to echo something Trump emphasized in his inauguration speech: The people have the power.
“There are thousands and thousands of people here today. And I think everyone should take note, that this is a very powerful voice – they’re activated and they must be taken seriously.”
The senator spent about 45 minutes backstage greeting people before her speech. Along the way she said she ran into someone who was best friends with her mother when they were students at UC Berkeley during the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
“This is absolutely personal to me. This is absolutely personal to me.”
Women traveled from all over the country to be at the D.C. march, including many from California. To them, and all Californians who were hoping for a different outcome, she paraphrased Coretta Scott King.
“The fight for civil rights will be fought and won with each generation. Whatever gains we make will not be permanent,” she said. “That’s the nature of it, so let’s not be dispirited.… Let’s just get up, pick ourselves up and get out there and fight. Fight for equality, fight for fairness, fight for justice.”
Houston mayor: ‘In this city, we are going to love one another’
In this city, we are all in it together. I don’t want people in this city walking around thinking they’re going to be divided, sent back. In this city, we’re not going to do that. In this city, we are going to love one another.
— Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, a Democrat, at a rally in front of city hall that followed the march there
Scarlett Johansson to Donald Trump: ‘I didn’t vote for you. But I want to be able to support you’
Speaking before hundreds of thousands gathered on the National Mall for the Women’s March on Washington, Scarlett Johansson addressed President Trump in his own terms -- the art of the deal.
She would support him if he would support her, her daughter, her family and all American women.
Declaring that it was time for even a private person like herself to get personal, Johansson delivered a passionate speech about the role Planned Parenthood has played in her life from her first visit at the age of 15. She called on the president to stop continued attempts to withdraw federal funding for the organization and offered an early olive branch to Trump, who has been inconsistent about his intentions.
“I didn’t vote for you. But I want to be able to support you. But first I ask that you support me,” she said, adding that she wanted her daughter to grow up with the same access to health resources that Trump’s daughter Ivanka had during her youth and young adulthood.
Follow L.A. Times reporters at women’s marches throughout the world
In Phoenix, protesters blame Trump for divisiveness
With an American flag hanging off her back and a large black circular sticker that read “Impeach!” Penny Shaw did not arrive at the protest rally in downtown Phoenix in a conciliatory mood.
“Our voting rights, our bodies, our water -- it’s all at risk, today,” said Shaw, 54, of Scottsdale. “You’ll find lots of reasons for people to be marching. All of it should scare us.”
More than 20,000 people found sunny and cool conditions in Phoenix for Saturday’s march, one of dozens of demonstrations around the country protesting the election of Donald Trump. Protesters blamed Trump for inciting a tone of national divisiveness.
Among the causes represented on signs on Saturday were LGBTQ rights, abortion rights, opposition to the Dakota Access pipeline, restoration of the Voting Rights Act and a litany of individual protests against comments Trump has made about members of minority communities, women and the disabled.
“In my 87 years, I’ve never felt such disunity,” said Toni Portnoy. “We need to be the America that was, not the America that’s going to be.”
Watch Miley Cyrus shimmy her way through downtown L.A. women’s march
Organizers released a long list of Hollywood heavyweights scheduled to attend Saturday’s march, including Natalie Portman, Kerry Washington and Barbra Streisand.
Tens of thousands at Sacramento women’s march
Trains were too packed for these women to board, so they hitchhiked to downtown L.A.
Some protesters hatched transportation plans that went smoothly, while others were thwarted by crowds at train stations that turned the trip downtown into an epic journey.
The Grashaws — three cousins and a mother — waited for two hours at the North Hollywood Red Line station before trying to hail an Uber.
The app kept canceling on them. So the four women hitchhiked, begging a random driver to take them downtown. They gave him $60 to drop them off on the other side of the 110 Freeway, at Beaudry and 4th, said Ashley Grashaw, 32.
One of the Grashaws held a sign that said “Trump = SOOOO unpopular — SAD!” which played on Trump’s favored diction. The other women held cardboard torches, one that said “freedom,” another “love” and the third “truth.”
Here’s an aerial view of the downtown L.A. women’s march
Why are people marching today? It’s personal
“Women’s rights aren’t up for grabs, and neither are we,” Los Angeles women’s march participant Jaime Hunt wrote us.
There’s no single reason hundreds of thousands are marching across the country. Some are marching for equality, some for sisterhood, some for daughters and some for mothers. Are you marching? Tell us why.
One protester’s message to Trump: ‘Tweet some hope is all I want, dude’
Brenda Tullo stayed up late crocheting a hat for her daughter, Allison, then rose before the sun came up to drive to downtown Los Angeles from San Bernardino.
“I’m doing this for the women who came before me, who gave me the privilege to do everything I do today,” said Allison Tullo, 24, who works at a coffee shop. Her aunt and grandmother went to a different Women’s March in Ventura.
President Trump has insulted just about everyone who isn’t a white man, she added, holding a pink sign that said “Pussy Power.”
Brenda Tullo, 56, a food and beverage manager, expressed outrage at Trump’s attitude about grabbing women’s private parts.
“I am a nasty woman,” she said, referencing an insult Trump directed at his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, during a presidential debate. Her pink sign read, “Nasty women unite.”
Many of the handmade signs carried by protesters referred to women’s rights, including abortion rights. Some were directed at Trump.
“Trump, putting the bully into the pulpit,” read one sign. “Keep your tiny hands off our rights,” read another.
Others sought to turn the conversation in a positive direction: “Tweet Love, Tweet Peace,” read the sign carried by Andrea Testa, 52, a realtor from Long Beach.
“Tweet some hope is all I want, dude,” she said.