Kuwait Times

Women’s March draws thousands as Trump term enters second year

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WASHINGTON: Thousands of protesters turned out across the nation for the second Women’s March yesterday, marking the first anniversar­y of President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on with rallies aimed at channeling female activism into political gains in elections this year. The coordinate­d rallies in Washington, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and about 250 other cities are a reprise of the mass protests that marked the beginning of Trump’s presidency. Sister rallies were also planned in Britain, Japan and other countries.

“We will make our message heard at the polls this fall,” Emily Patton, a rally organizer, told thousands of demonstrat­ors at the Reflecting Pool on Washington’s National Mall. “That is why we are urging people to register to vote today.” The rallies also come during what has been seen as a pivotal year for women’s rights with the #MeToo and #TimesUp social media effort against sexual harassment and abuse that was born out of a string of scandals in Hollywood, Washington and elsewhere.

The Washington rally featured Democratic politician­s from neighborin­g Virginia, including Senator Tim Kaine, who blamed Trump and Republican­s for the shutdown of the government yesterday. “The Trump shutdown is due to the inability of the Republican Party to do basic governing, like making a budget,” he said to cheers.

Many of the protesters wore pink knit “pussy hats”, which were created for last year’s march as a reference to a comment made by Trump about female genitalia, The caps quickly became a symbol of women’s empowermen­t and opposition to the new president in the early days of his administra­tion. “We want to continue the fight to resist this president and the policies we’re against,” said Sara Piper, 59, a geologist from Reston, Virginia. Some critics said this year’s march lacked a focus. Targeting an issue such as immigratio­n would have greater impact, said Shikha Dalmia, a senior analyst at the Reason Foundation, a libertaria­n think tank. “Beating the feminist drum just seems to me beside the point. Maybe they are trying to cast as wide a net as possible,” Dalmia said by telephone.

One of the biggest marches is expected in New York, where 37,000 people had signed up on the march’s Facebook page. But the number of participan­ts in this year’s rallies is likely to fall well short of the estimated 5 million who marched on Jan 21, 2017, and made that one of the largest mass protests in US history.

In Chicago, thousands of mostly female marchers gathered ahead of a rally in Grant Park, carrying signs that read “Strong women raising strong women” and “You can’t cure stupid but you can vote it out.” Michelle Saunders, 41, a software saleswoman from Des Plaines, Illinois, came to the rally with her 14-year-old daughter Bailey. They attended last year’s march and anticipate­d that the crowd this year would not match the 250,000 that attended last year, but for them the message is just as strong. “A smaller crowd will not mean people are any less angry,” Michelle Saunders said. “We are unhappy with the current administra­tion and what it stands for and want our voices to be heard.”

Since last year’s march, women have become more vocal and that is a positive sign, said Cathy Mutz, 63, a retired nurse from Chanahan, Illinois. “I think change will come from the midterm elections,” she said. Organizers hope to build on the energy felt by Trump opponents after his surprise election victory in 2016 and channel it into gains for progressiv­e candidates in November’s midterm elections, using the theme “Power to the Polls.” — Reuters

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 ??  ?? NEW YORK: People gather near Central Park before the beginning of the Women’s March yesterday. — AFP
NEW YORK: People gather near Central Park before the beginning of the Women’s March yesterday. — AFP

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