Albuquerque Journal

March organizers look to build on protest turnout

Political impact key to efforts

- BY NICHOLAS RICCARDI ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER — Deb Szeman, a self-described “homebody,” had never participat­ed in a demonstrat­ion before hopping on an overnight bus from her home in Charlotte, North Carolina, to attend the women’s march on Washington.

She returned on another bus that pulled in at 4 a.m. Sunday, full of people buzzing about what might come next and quipping that they would see each other at the next march.

“I wouldn’t have spent 18 hours in Washington, D.C., and taken the bus for seven hours both ways if I didn’t believe there was going to be a part two, and three and four and five,” said Szeman, 25, who works at a nonprofit and joined the National Organizati­on for Women after Trump won the White House.

“I feel like there’s been an awakening,” she said.

More than a million people turned out Saturday to nationwide demonstrat­ions opposing President Donald Trump’s agenda, a forceful showing that raised liberals’ hopes after the election denied them control of all branches of federal government. Now, the question is whether that energy can be sustained and turned into political impact.

From marches against the Iraq War in 2003 to Occupy Wall Street, several big demonstrat­ions have not directly translated into real-world results. In Wisconsin, for example, tens of thousands stormed the state Capitol in 2011 to protest Gov. Scott Walker’s moves to weaken unions. Walker has since been re-elected.

Trump also won the state in November as Republican­s increased their hold on the statehouse, part of the GOP’s domination of state-level elections in recent years.

Organizers of Saturday’s marches are promising 10 additional actions to take during the first 100 days of Trump’s presidency. So far, the first and only is for supporters to write to their senators or representa­tives.

Groups scrambled so fast to arrange the massive demonstrat­ions in only a few weeks that they have had limited time to determine how to channel the energy into additional action. But, they promise, it’s coming.

“The left has really woken up and said, ‘My gosh, we’ve been fighting the symbolic fight, but we haven’t been fighting the institutio­nal fight,’” said Yong Jung-Cho of the activist group All of Us, which organized protests at the inaugurati­on as well as the women’s march.

There’s still value in symbolism. Saturday’s immense crowds ruffled the new president as his press secretary falsely contended that Trump had broken a record on inaugurati­on attendance. Jamie Henn of the climate action group 350.org said that reaction is a hint on how to build the movement.

“Size matters to this guy,” Henn said. “It’s like dealing with a schoolyard bully and some of us need to go back to middle school and revisit what that’s like” as they think up new tactics.

Saudi Garcia, a 24-yearold anthropolo­gy student at New York University, is a veteran of Black Lives Matter protests in New York. She rode to Washington with longtime, largely minority activists to block checkpoint­s to the inaugurati­on.

She was heartened to find herself in a very different crowd Saturday, which she described as largely white women, many of whom brought young children to the women’s march.

Garcia hopes those women stay involved in fighting Trump.

“We need to be like the tea party was in 2009,” Garcia said. “Those people were relentless — showing up at town council meetings, everywhere.”

 ?? OLIVER CONTRERAS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Saturday’s protest march, a rejoinder to the inaugurati­on of President Donald Trump, was the largest D.C. rally in years.
OLIVER CONTRERAS/THE WASHINGTON POST Saturday’s protest march, a rejoinder to the inaugurati­on of President Donald Trump, was the largest D.C. rally in years.

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