The Jerusalem Post

Women’s marches across US set sights on midterm ballot box while praising #MeToo

- • By LAURA KING, ANDREA CASTILLO and NINA AGRAWAL (Gabriela Bhaskar/Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Los Angeles Times/TNS) – In a boisterous coast-to-coast outpouring, hundreds of thousands of marchers in dozens of cities staged a reprise of last year’s massive Women’s March, seeking to not only deliver a powerful rebuke to the policies of President Donald Trump, but also mount a crucial mobilizati­on for this year’s midterm elections.

“Because of you, the revolution is rolling!” actress Natalie Portman told marchers in downtown Los Angeles, drawing a galvanizin­g force, like speakers at many of the rallies, in the #MeToo movement and within the drive to hold powerful men accountabl­e for sexual misconduct.

“Everything is at stake,” actress Jane Fonda told marchers in snowy Park City, Utah, scene of the Sundance Film Festival, in another nod to the #MeToo movement. “We’ve got to give it all we’ve got. Time is up!”

In addition to the roll call of major American cities where marches took place – including New York, Washington, Los Angeles, Dallas, Philadelph­ia, Chicago, San Francisco and Atlanta – protesters also raised their voices in suburbs and small towns, reflecting the aim of coalescing a broad-based movement on the anniversar­y of Trump’s inaugurati­on to oppose the president’s stance on immigratio­n, healthcare, racial divides and an array of other issues.

Against the backdrop of the US government shutdown that took hold Saturday, many marchers pointed to the irony of the closure of iconic sites associated with the fight for liberty and equality, such as the Statue of Liberty and the visitor center at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site in Atlanta.

Like last year’s protests, these overspille­d US borders, with dozens of overseas gatherings. At a linked event Saturday in Rome, Italian actress-director Asia Argento, one of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein’s accusers, called on women to “speak out and change things.”

Among the crowds that gathered in Pershing Square in downtown Los Angeles for a rally before marching to Grand Park in front of City Hall, Scarlett Cunningham-Young, 11, stood next to eight of her friends and their families, holding a sign with a quote by Nobel Peace laureate Malala Yousafzai, who as a Pakistani schoolgirl survived an assassinat­ion attempt by the Taliban.

It was Scarlett’s second year attending the Women’s March, and she said she felt inspired by a thrilling sense of common purpose. “I hope that this country wakes up and realizes that women and girls have voices, too,” she said. THERE WAS a short confrontat­ion between supporters of Trump and some marchers near the end of the march route near Los Angeles Police Department headquarte­rs, where a group of eight Trump supporters stood waving flags and speaking through bullhorns.

Women’s March volunteers stood in a line holding hands in front of the pro-Trump crowd, separating them from the bulk of the marchers. Dozens of police officers kept watch.

The two groups hurled insults at each other, with the Trump backers yelling, “Go back to Mexico!” and the marchers yelling, “Go home, racists!”

Despite the gravity of the issues at hand, the mood at many of the rallies was lightheart­ed. Marchers vied to outdo one another with droll signs: “Ugh where do I start?” read one, while another declared: “If you take away my birth control, I’ll just make more feminists.” The age spectrum ranged from babies in strollers to elders helping one another along, with large numbers of men marching alongside women.

To a certain extent, ethnically mixed crowds in many locales reflected big-city demographi­cs, although the year’s protests were also the subject of pointed commentary about the inclusiven­ess of the #MeToo movement, with its roots in Hollywood and among the elite.

Actress Viola Davis, addressing the enormous rally in downtown Los Angeles, crystalliz­ed those sentiments, demanding a voice for the voiceless.

“I am speaking today not just for the ‘MeToos,’ because I am a MeToo,” she said. “But when I raise my hand, I am aware of all the women who are still in silence, the women who are faceless, the women who don’t have the money and who don’t have the constituti­on and who don’t have the confidence and who don’t have the images in our media that give them a sense of self-worth to break their silence.”

In Trump’s hometown of New York City, crowds were backed up for dozens of blocks leading to the rally site on the edge of Central Park. Marchers in sashes with “#MeToo” and “#TimesUp” stood still on side streets where pink “No Parking” signs on police barricades blocked sidewalks.

In Washington, the march made its way to the very gates of the White House. Groups gathered early in the day in the shadow of the Lincoln Memorial under crystal-clear skies. Brazilian drummers warmed up the crowd to cheers.

Later, though, protesters were able to gather within earshot – and in a direct sight line – of the White House, massing on a stretch of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue that was closed last year for the inaugurati­on.

Because of the government shutdown, Trump was in town, having put off a trip to his Florida resort of Mar-a-Lago for a glitzy $100,000-per-couple fund-raiser. The president took to Twitter to hail the anniversar­y of his inaugurati­on, suggesting that marchers could use the occasion to celebrate his accomplish­ments.

“Beautiful weather all over our great country, a perfect day for all Women to March,” he tweeted. “Get out there now to celebrate the historic milestones and unpreceden­ted economic success and wealth creation that has taken place over the last 12 months. Lowest female unemployme­nt in 18 years!”

Democratic US Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, who was the target of a recent Twitter attack by the president in which he insinuated she was willing to trade sexual favors in exchange for financial support, addressed the crowd in the capital, telling them: “It is women who are holding our democracy together in these dangerous times.” TRUMP WAS repeatedly invoked, and not just because it was the first anniversar­y of his presidency. Last year’s nationwide marches came only months after the Access Hollywood tape of Trump bragging in crude terms about groping women without their consent became the genesis of the “pussyhats,” or pink cat’s-ears hats that made a robust reappearan­ce at Saturday’s protests.

This year, many marchers marveled at the president’s seeming impunity even as #MeToo has forced so many perpetrato­rs of sexual misconduct from positions of power. The president has branded as liars more than a dozen women who have stepped forward to accuse him of sexual impropriet­y, and he is weathering revelation­s – which he denies – of carrying on an affair with adultfilm actress Stephanie Clifford, known profession­ally as Stormy Daniels, around the time that Melania Trump gave birth to their youngest son, Barron.

“Stormy Daniels, Secretary of Internal Affairs,” read one sign in Los Angeles.

In Texas, more than 4,500 people marched through downtown Dallas. Many said they felt the need to demonstrat­e that a historical­ly red state is rapidly diversifyi­ng, especially in its largest cities.

“I’m rooting for Texas to become a swing state,” said Andres Ramirez, 35, of Fort Worth, who works in a call center and is campaignin­g for the Democrat who is attempting to unseat local Republican Rep. Pete Sessions.

Attorney Marita Covarrubia­s, 54, brought her 17-year-old daughter and friend. “Living here in Texas, you don’t see a lot of social activism,” said Covarrubia­s, who grew up in Santa Monica and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley. “Unfortunat­ely, things have not improved over the past year. Women really need to get together to take action on these issues.”

The march in Portland, Oregon, broke into several splinter groups, with many surrounded by police in riot gear. “Hey hey, ho ho, Donald Trump has got to go!” demonstrat­ors shouted.

In Atlanta, thousands of activists gathered at a squat, brightly painted warehouse in a poor but gentrifyin­g neighborho­od southwest of downtown as organizers set up booths on voting, women’s healthcare and civil rights.

Rather than march again, organizers of Power to the Polls planned the event to inspire more progressiv­e candidates to run for office, register voters and educate activists on how they can effectivel­y mobilize people to vote.

The point is to go beyond another feel-good moment, said Janel Green, one of the organizers of the Atlanta Women’s March last year. “We’ve already mobilized,” she said. “It’s time now to translate that momentum into impacting elections. We’ve got to develop strategies to mobilize and inform voters.”

All across the country, organizers said electoral politics are increasing­ly taking precedence over street activism. There are 390 potential female candidates for the US House, almost double the 202 women running at this time in 2016, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

Another 49 female candidates are probably running for the Senate, compared with 21 two years ago. The majority of these female candidates are Democrats.

Some organizers said they see the marches as galvanized by concern about a broad range of issues that disproport­ionately affect women. In New York, Xochitl Oseguera, the campaign director of the advocacy group Moms Rising, cited hot-button topics such as immigratio­n, gender-based pay gaps and healthcare.

“Before the Women’s March, we just didn’t have the support of other women in such an open and loud way,” she said. “Now we can share our stories and be heard a lot more than before.”

 ??  ?? PEOPLE TAKE PART in the Women’s March in Manhattan on Saturday.
PEOPLE TAKE PART in the Women’s March in Manhattan on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel