Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Despite internal divide, Women’s March in D.C. united against Trump

- BY ASHRAF KHALIL

WASHINGTON — Amid internal controvers­ies and a capital city deeply distracted by the partial government shutdown, the third Women’s March returned to Washington on Saturday with an enduring message of anger and defiance aimed directly at President Donald Trump’s White House.

The original march in 2017, the day after Trump’s inaugurati­on, flooded the city with pink-hatted protesters. The exact size of the turnout remains subject to a politicall­y charged debate, but it’s generally regarded as the largest Washington protest since the Vietnam era.

This year was a more modest affair for multiple reasons. An estimated 100,000 protesters packed several blocks around Freedom Plaza, just east of the White House, holding a daylong rally. The march itself took about an hour and only moved about four blocks west along Pennsylvan­ia Avenue past the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel before looping back to Freedom Plaza.

Organizers submitted a permit applicatio­n estimating up to 500,000 participan­ts even though it was widely expected that the turnout would be smaller. The original plan was to gather on the National Mall. But with the forecast calling for snow and freezing rain and the National Park Service no longer plowing snow because of the shutdown, organizers on Thursday changed the march’s location and route.

As it turned out the weather was chilly but otherwise pleasant, and the mood among the marchers a now-familiar mix of sister-power camaraderi­e and defiant anger toward Trump and the larger power structure. As always the Trump administra­tion was the direct target of most of the abuse — with fresh bitterness stemming from more recent events like Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s successful confirmati­on last fall despite a direct accusation of sexual misconduct when he was in high school.

One sign declared, “Strong women only fear weak men.” Another stated, “MOOD: Still pretty mad about Kavanaugh.”

Parallel marches took place in dozens of cities around the country.

In Los Angeles, a few hundred demonstrat­ors gathered in Pershing Square downtown and marched to Grand Park as the crowd swelled to thousands.

“Democracy is not a spectator sport and I came out to continue to stand for that propositio­n, said Ellen Klugman of Marina Del Rey. “If I don’t go, who will?”

In San Francisco, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was in the march and video on Twitter showed people clapping and cheering as she passed.

Preparatio­ns for this year’s march were roiled by an intense ideologica­l debate among the movement’s senior leadership. In November, Teresa Shook, one of the movement’s founders, accused the four main leaders of the national march organizati­on of anti-Semitism.

The accusation was leveled at two primary leaders: Linda Sarsour, a Palestinia­n-American who has frequently criticized Israeli policies, and Tamika Mallory, who has maintained a public associatio­n with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.

Shook, a retired lawyer from Hawaii, has been credited with sparking the movement by creating a Facebook event that went viral and snowballed into the massive protest on Jan. 21, 2017. In a recent Facebook post, she claimed Sarsour and Mallory, along with fellow organizers Bob Bland and Carmen Perez, had “steered the Movement away from its true course” and called for all four to step down.

The four march organizers have denied the charge, but Sarsour has publicly expressed regret that they were not “faster and clearer in helping people understand our values.”

Despite pleas for unity, the internal tensions were most keenly felt in New York. An alternate women’s march organizati­on held a parallel rally a few miles away from the official New York Women’s March protest, and one activist actually disrupted the main protest.

 ?? AP ?? Demonstrat­ors march down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue on Saturday during the Women’s March in Washington, D.C.
AP Demonstrat­ors march down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue on Saturday during the Women’s March in Washington, D.C.

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