USA TODAY US Edition

Women’s March organizers keep up Trump attacks

Groups make their voice heard on Capitol Hill hearing for Kavanaugh

- Christal Hayes and Kristen Jordan Shamus

WASHINGTON – Every few minutes, shouting fills the second-floor chambers of the Hart Senate Office Building.

“Save Roe, vote no!” one woman yells. Another woman, wearing a red bandanna in the style of Rosie the Riveter, joins her: “Health care is a human right!”

The rows of reporters, typing feverishly on their laptops, look up. Senators stop midsentenc­e. Officers lined against the walls of the chamber pounce on the women, dragging them out of the large wood-paneled room.

This isn’t chaos, though. It is a highly organized effort to disrupt and delay the confirmati­on hearings for Brett Kavanaugh, the president’s choice for the U.S. Supreme Court.

“Cancel Kavanaugh!” Phoebe Hopps, president and founder of Women’s March Michigan, chanted at Wednesday’s hearing before being dragged out of the chamber and arrested with other protesters.

She couldn’t stay in her home in the northweste­rn Michigan town of Kewadin while the Senate spent last week considerin­g Kavanaugh for a seat on the highest court in the nation.

“I told my husband that I had to get to D.C. because I knew what was on the line,” said Hopps. “I used my airline (frequent flier) miles. My husband asked, ‘Don’t you want to save these for a nice vacation?’ And I was like, ‘No! I need to be in D.C. right now.’ It’s worth it. ... We need woman power.”

The Women’s March organizers are a steady force, a persistent group that while doesn’t always gain national exposure for its efforts, has kept up pressure on Republican­s and their conservati­ve agenda.

Even if they’ve been unable to alter the conservati­ve path completely, they’ve made it clear they’re not going away as they find new and different ways to voice their often loud objections.

Some of the same individual­s rallied against the separation of immigratio­n families at the border. They helped young students organize massive rallies to counter gun laws. They rose up against the president’s travel ban and helped boost women nominees in political races across the nation. They held gatherings in support of women’s reproducti­ve rights and access to health care.

The group’s roots grew up out of the 2016 election of Donald Trump. Its first event was the massive Women’s March on Washington – with hundreds of sister protests around the world – the day after Trump’s 2107 inaugurati­on.

“I think we all realized that we hadn’t been paying attention to all these issues until it was too late. It took one single enormous act for all of us to wake up – President Trump in the White House,” said Alex Dodds, 34.

Dodds attended the first Women’s March event in 2017 and helped form a local group in the Washington area to keep up pressure on the Trump administra­tion. She rallied against Kavanaugh this week and said his nomination could be one of the most long-lasting and encapsulat­ing decisions the Trump administra­tion and Republican­s would make.

“I think we’ve learned there are a lot of intersecti­ons of issues, whether it be women’s health to immigratio­n to guns, and Kavanaugh will have a huge deciding factor on all of them,” she said.

It seems at every turn, the Women’s March organizati­on has taken a stand against the Trump administra­tion’s controvers­ial policies, sometimes headlining events and other times backing up or partnering with other activist groups in an attempt to slow or place a roadblock on the president’s agenda.

Women’s March organizers paired with students in Parkland, Florida, and across the nation after the February high school shooting, which killed

17 people, and assisted in planning both the school walkout protests and the March for Our Lives rallies.

“We played a very strong role in organizing and mobilizing youth across the country and in fact from there, in the aftermath of that launch, we put out a call and said, ‘Hey, who wants to start a youth chapter?” said Rachel O’Leary Carmona, chief operating officer of Women’s March National. About

170 local Youth Empower chapters were formed after that with an aim to register voters and create transforma­tive social change in neighborho­ods across the nation.

“I told my husband that I had to get to D.C. because I knew what was on the line.” Phoebe Hopps

 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS/EPA-EFE ?? Women’s reproducti­ve rights activists who oppose the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court protest outside the Senate Judiciary Committee’s confirmati­on hearing Friday on Capitol Hill.
MICHAEL REYNOLDS/EPA-EFE Women’s reproducti­ve rights activists who oppose the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court protest outside the Senate Judiciary Committee’s confirmati­on hearing Friday on Capitol Hill.

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