The Mercury News

Students, women, teachers embrace activism

- By David Crary

Suddenly, America is on the march.

Saturday’s March for Our Lives, planned for Washington and hundreds of other locations, is just the most recent sign that an extraordin­ary number of Americans are taking to heart the old truism that democracy should not be a spectator sport.

In numbers not seen since the tumult of the 1960s and ’70s, multitudes are venturing off the sidelines and into the game in a remarkable surge of political and social activism. Their ranks include high school students angered by gun violence, teachers fed up with low pay, and women energized by a range of grievances — notably pervasive sexual harassment and the longtime dominance of men in political power.

The array of massive women’s marches in January 2017, primarily a backlash to Donald Trump’s election as president, served as prelude to the #MeToo movement, which caught fire in October and continues to this day as emboldened women call out men who have sexually mistreated them in workplaces ranging from Hollywood to state legislatur­es to symphony orchestras.

The Feb. 14 massacre

at a high school in Parkland, Florida, reignited the simmering national campaign to curtail gun violence. Tens of thousands of students across the U.S. walked out of their classrooms on March 14 to demand action by politician­s, a prelude to this weekend’s March for Our Lives.

“I’m scared to attend my own school,” said Scarlett Scott-Buck, one of about 100 high school students from Lake Oswego, Oregon, who traveled to the state capitol for a recent gun-control rally. “I’m here to be an activist for my rights to live, my friends’ rights to live.”

As the gun-control campaign was spreading nationally, public school teachers in West Virginia provided a dramatic example of how organized activism can prevail. After a

nine-day walkout, they won a 5 percent pay raise even though they lacked collective bargaining rights and had no legal right to strike.

Racial tensions also have fueled activism, including the Black Lives Matter campaign protesting the deaths of black men at the hands of police, and the take-a-knee protests by some National Football League players.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, sees a common denominato­r in the overlappin­g movements.

“People see that when they come together, they have power that they don’t have when they’re alone,” she said. “Trump says ‘I alone can do it.’ But in these movements being created now, there’s a sense that with collective action, you can make possible what would have seemed impossible.”

Another common denominato­r: The use of social media to publicize and organize a movement with a speed and scope beyond the wildest dreams of activists in the 1960s. It took only a few days for global use of the #MeToo hashtag to pass the 1 million mark. Parkland student Emma Gonzalez quickly amassed more than 1.2 million Twitter followers after the shooting. And the West Virginia teachers plotted their walkout strategy over a private Facebook page that grew from an initial 100 members to more than 24,000.

The new embrace of activism has spread into the realm of pop culture, too. When Frances McDormand accepted her Best Actress award at the Oscars, she urged all the women to stand in unison in support of equal pay. She was on stage accepting the Academy Award for her role in “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” about a mother who takes matters into her own hands and fights back against the status quo.

The protests have echoes of what happened the last time a new president was elected. In 2010, conservati­ves staged boisterous rallies around the country in response to President Barack Obama’s health care law. The tea party movement helped Republican­s complete a takeover of Congress the midterm elections that year.

Some organizers of the current protests have openly borrowed strategies developed by the tea party.

The group Indivisibl­e was launched as an online handbook in December 2016 by two former Democratic congressio­nal staffers in hopes of building antiTrump resistance, similar to what the tea party was to Obama.

As it became more of a force in activism, Indivisibl­e has taken money from deep-pocketed donors, leading to criticism that the protest movement is more of an effort by powerful people on the left than a truly grassroots endeavor. Indivisibl­e co-founder Ezra Levin disagrees, saying many of the movement’s recruits are first-time activists eager to make a difference.

Among those getting deeply engaged are a record number of women seeking high-level political office. Nearly 500 women — roughly three-quarters of them Democrats — plan to run for Congress this year, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. That’s up from 334 women who filed to run for the House or Senate in 2012, the previous record high. Women currently hold 106 of the 535 seats in Congress.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Thousands attend a women’s march at the Salt Lake City Capitol on Jan. 23, 2017. The massive women’s marches that month, primarily a backlash to Donald Trump’s election as president, served as prelude to the #MeToo movement.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Thousands attend a women’s march at the Salt Lake City Capitol on Jan. 23, 2017. The massive women’s marches that month, primarily a backlash to Donald Trump’s election as president, served as prelude to the #MeToo movement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States