From Sacramento to LA, women’s march protests Trump policies
LOS ANGELES — Hundreds of thousands of women’s marchers amassed at parks and city halls throughout California on Saturday to condemn sexual harassment, violence against women and the presidency of Donald Trump.
LOS ANGELES — Hundreds of thousands of women's marchers amassed at parks and city halls throughout California on Saturday to condemn sexual harassment, violence against women and the presidency of Donald Trump.
Speakers, including Hollywood stars, urged women to vote in the midterm elections that Democrats hope will let them regain control of the Republican-dominated House of Representatives.
Speakers and marchers condemned Gopbacked Trump administration policies that they consider threaten the rights of women, immigrants and gays.
“Women together can stop this slide to the bottom,” actress Alfre Woodard told a crowd at Los Angeles City Hall. “The 2018 midterms start now, today, at this spot in this moment. You have the power in your hands to change history.”
Actress Scarlett Johansson said women have been “conditioned” to need approval from men and referenced the Time's Up movement against sexual harassment, saying: “For me, moving forward means time's up on the female condition.”
Mayor Eric Garcetti estimated 500,000 people were at the rally — one of many being held on the anniversary of Trump's inauguration.
Marchers, many in bright pink cat-eared “pussy” hats, held signs attacking Trump.
Diane Omari, who came to the march with 30 other men and women, held a sign reading “Trumpster for the Dumpster.”
“I'm sick to my stomach every day, and I find myself working on not being angry, because there's only so much we can do. So to me, this is one of the ways I can let the world know that I resist,” said Joan Durham of Los Angeles, who described herself as an activist since the 1960s.
Sixteen-year-old Caley Medina said she wanted to spread her activism beyond her high school campus, so she came to the march with her mom and brother.
“This is my first women's march and I'm honestly so glad that I came,” she said. “I think our generation is a little pessimistic because we don't go out and vote in large numbers and we aren't as politically active as we should be, so we really try to tell people that our opinions are worth it and it's really important that we go out and speak our minds.”
Other peaceful demonstrations drew large crowds from the state Capitol in Sacramento to cities in the San Francisco Bay Area and south to San Diego.
In San Francisco, where 100,000 people were expected, acting Mayor London Breed greeted marchers.
“We will not silently sit back as the Fed Gov continues to push an agenda that stigmatizes women's rights, LGBTQ communities and immigrants,” she tweeted.