San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

LOCAL, U.S. MARCHES URGE WOMEN TO VOTE FOR CHANGE

Group of about 300 marches in Balboa Park in solidarity

- BY LAUREN J. MAPP lauren.mapp@sduniontri­bune.com

Thousands of people wearing face masks marched Saturday through the nation’s capital and in cities across the nation — including San Diego — urging voters to cast their ballots against President Donald Trump and other Republican candidates to protect women’s rights.

Nearly four years after an election that galvanized millions of protesters to march in cities nationwide — many of them for the first time — Women’s March leaders hope to bring a final show of force before Nov. 3. Organizers say more than 116,000 people have pledged to march or participat­e in other actions Saturday.

“Everything we’ve been doing has been leading up to this,” said Caitlin Breedlove, deputy executive director of organizati­onal advancemen­t for the Women’s March. “We’re not only in resistance. We’re actually fighting for what we need to build.”

The march is taking place days before the Senate holds its first vote to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a liberal leader and feminist icon. The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote Thursday on the nomination of Barrett, who would cement the conservati­ve advantage on the court.

In San Diego, more than 300 women, men and children marched through Balboa Park chanting “Women’s rights are human rights” and “Our bodies, our choice.”

Some women donned knitted, pink kitten hats that trended in women’s marches following Trump’s 2016 election, or red robes and white bonnets inspired by Margaret Atwood’s novel “The Handmaid’s Tale.” Others held rainbow flags supporting the LGBTQ+ community or carried signs honoring Ginsburg, with messages like “We are Ruthless, so we must be ruthless” and “We dissent.”

“We are here in the spirit of RBG — let’s lead by her example,” Mountain View resident Athena Bazalaki said to the crowd through a megaphone. “This is for everybody, it’s about equality. We are all fighting for each other, we are a community, we need to treat each other as such and keep on fighting.” Bazalaki, who attended the event with her two sons and boyfriend, helped to lead chants throughout the march. She said her passion for women’s rights, especially Black women’s rights, was largely inspired by Ginsburg’s career.

“Here we were trying to bring awareness and amplify the fact that they’re trying to fill her seat before President Trump is voted out,” Bazalaki said. “We want them to leave that seat be and let the next president make that decision.”

Escondido resident Maya Goodblanke­t — who is Cheyenne and Arapaho — said in her opinion, electing a new president is vital for addressing the needs of indigenous people, such as stopping the Dakota Access Pipeline and stopping the epidemic of missing and murdered indigenous women.

“Gathering today like this creates unity, it creates a sense of purpose for a lot of people, and it gives us all hope,” Goodblanke­t said. “Indigenous people have always been put to the back burner, our voices are never heard, and that has definitely been apparent in this administra­tion, as well.”

Attendees represente­d the gamut of racial and gender demographi­cs, and spanned every generation.

One woman, 68-year-old Deborah Smith of Lakeside, said she first got involved with activism more than 50 years ago, fighting for civil rights, specifical­ly those affecting women and LGBTQ+ people. Back then, she had friends who resorted to coat hanger abortions in back alleys of Mexico to stop unwanted pregnancie­s. The same key issues inspired her to join Saturday’s march.

“I did this before, way back in the ’60s and ’70s, never thinking I’d have to do it again,” Smith said. “Times are really urgent right now, and we need to be out on the streets because this fascist regime in Washington, D.C., is destroying our country, so we have to stop them ... It’s just history repeating itself.”

Teenager Kyarah Smith, who is 14 and not related to Deborah, attended the march with her mother and 17-year-old cousin.

“I’m here because I’m part of the Black youth in San Diego and I believe that my voice matters, especially because I’m going to be a part of the future,” she said.

One man working at a constructi­on site on Sixth Avenue yelled for the passing marchers to “Go home,” though most observers stood on the sidewalks cheering, clapping and following along to the chants, and some even followed in line with the march.

The march was organized by Meetup users who were not affiliated with the official Women’s March San Diego group.

Members of that group, concerned about the continued spread of the coronaviru­s, instead joined up with chapters across the country in a text banking campaign Saturday, said Women’s March San Diego board member Poppy Fitch. Their goal was to reach more than 5 million eligible voters throughout the day.

“We want to continue to honor the public health guidance that really should be informing everything that we do,” Fitch said. “Also, we were concerned about the proximity of this date to the upcoming election and really wanting to focus our energy and effort around direct action that could result in increasing voter turnout.”

Throughout the past week, volunteers wrote nearly 4,000 postcards to Republican senators urging them to reconsider confirming Barrett.

The march comes amid an economic recession that has fallen especially hard on women of color and mothers, a Supreme Court nomination that many fear threatens the reproducti­ve rights of women, and a presidenti­al election that could be decided in large part by women. Former vice president Joe Biden holds a 23 percentage point advantage over Trump among female likely voters (59 percent to 36 percent), according to a Washington POST-ABC News poll. Meanwhile, Trump and Biden split men, with 48 percent each.

While the Washington march drew hundreds of participan­ts who made their way to rally in front of the Supreme Court Saturday, a conservati­ve women’s organizati­on held a counterpro­test at the same location. The smaller “I’m With Her” rally in support of Barrett and organized by the Independen­t Women’s Forum was intended to send the message that the Women’s March participan­ts “do not speak for all women.”

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Marchers in Balboa Park on Saturday called for supporters to vote to protect women’s rights in the Nov. 3 election.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Marchers in Balboa Park on Saturday called for supporters to vote to protect women’s rights in the Nov. 3 election.
 ?? RICK BOWMER AP ?? People walk to the Utah State Capitol during a march in Salt Lake City on Saturday, one of many events across the country.
RICK BOWMER AP People walk to the Utah State Capitol during a march in Salt Lake City on Saturday, one of many events across the country.

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