Los Angeles Times

My crowd was bigger than yours

Disputes over how many people attended political events are latest manifestat­ion of the national divide.

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com Times staff writer Cathleen Decker in Washington contribute­d to this story.

For the last two years, a divided America has been on a desperate quest to figure out which political worldview is most popular, and thus more powerful, and thus rightfully in control of the nation’s future. We apparently still don’t have an answer.

There were the seemingly endless presidenti­al polls, the election predictors like FiveThirty­Eight.com, and, of course, Donald Trump himself, who bragged about his rallies and his TV ratings. Whatever it was, bigger numbers were better: They indicated momentum for the biggest opinion poll of all on Nov. 8.

Except Trump’s presidenti­al victory has come and gone, and in a sign of how fractious things have gotten, the quest for quantifica­tion rages on: Crowd sizes have lately become one of America’s most important opinion polls, the latest metric to measure the turbulent political winds blowing through the country.

Over the course of just one week, the National Mall in Washington has held three large political gatherings, each representi­ng three huge constituen­cies, with each trying to demonstrat­e popular legitimacy and influence.

Trump supporters made their showing first, on Inaugurati­on Day, as an estimated couple of hundred thousand supporters gathered in front of the U.S. Capitol to watch and hear him be sworn in as president.

Facing historical­ly low approval ratings for a new president, Trump has tried to argue that his inaugurati­on was the most-watched of all time. He also reportedly pressured the National Park Service to find photos showing that his crowd wasn’t smaller than the gargantuan crowd at Barack Obama’s first inaugurati­on in 2009, and he continued to litigate the issue in the media. “I looked out, the field was, it looked like a million, million and a half people,” Trump said in an appearance at the CIA the day after his inaugurati­on, complainin­g that media coverage had inaccurate­ly reflected the attendance of his swearingin. “They showed a field where there were practicall­y nobody standing there. And they said, ‘Donald Trump did not draw well.’ … It’s a lie.”

Also on Jan. 21, anti-Trump protesters responded in force, with millions gathering for a women’s march, on the Mall in Washington and in cities across the country. An estimated 500,000 alone marched in Washington.

Many of those marchers saw Trump as an illegitima­te president: a candidate who received almost 3 million fewer votes than his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton. Many also saw the march as new, quantitati­ve evidence of Trump’s unpopulari­ty.

“The president is not America. We are America!” actress America Ferrera declared to the crowd.

Some conservati­ves tried to downplay the massive display in D.C. “It’s almost as if one party has a base of wealthy coastal elites who can travel easily and the other does not,” tweeted Conn Carroll, spokesman for Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah.

Amid all this, on Friday, America’s religious right, which largely supported Trump, swam into the political cataracts as at least tens of thousands gathered for the March for Life rally at the foot of the Washington Monument. (Some photograph­s suggested the march was smaller than the women’s march crowds, though there were no official counts.)

The March for Life is typically the largest conservati­ve demonstrat­ion of the year, a gathering held to rally opposition against the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Roe vs. Wade ruling in 1973, which defined women’s legal right to abort a pregnancy.

It’s been a good year generally for conservati­ves opposed to abortion. They stand to pick up a conservati­ve Supreme Court justice and have seen one of their champions, Mike Pence, ascend to the vice presidency. (Pence addressed the March for Life crowd Friday.)

Yet many on the right had watched the widespread news coverage of the Women’s March on Washington and wondered why their own annual march doesn’t get more media attention.

“When you looked at how much the networks covered the women’s march even before it happened, they served as press agents for the women’s march, and turned around and said, ‘Look at how successful this was; look how many people attended,’” said Dan Gainor, vice president of the Media Research Center, a conservati­ve watchdog that has pushed for more mainstream television coverage of the March for Life. “That seems a tad unfair.”

Gainor pointed to polling that he said showed that Americans are more likely to call themselves conservati­ve than liberal or moderate.

“Is CNN going to go live for the whole March for Life? Is ABC going to run an endless live-stream shot? That’s the problem here,” Gainor said. “This is a big event ... the biggest conservati­ve rally of the year, and we struggle to get coverage for it at all.”

Yet some recent polling also shows that public support for abortion legalizati­on is at its highest point in two decades, largely driven by increases in support among Democratic women.

Kristina Hernandez, a spokeswoma­n for Students for Life, a group that opposes abortion, said about 50 of its members had attended the women’s march and felt “vastly outnumbere­d.”

“The reaction to the women’s march has overwhelmi­ngly been, ‘If this is what feminism looks like, I want no part of it,’ ” Hernandez said.

Ann Grimes-Essay, 56, of Pittsburgh braved the cold Friday to join the March for Life, which she said she had first attended when she was 14.

She, too, had heard about the women’s march and how an antiaborti­on women’s group had been prevented from joining the leadership, and she called that “a slap in the face to women who believe in respecting all life.”

Because of that, Grimes-Essay said, “I really think that for most pro-lifers it was very important that we make a stand, to say that we’re still here.”

 ?? Ricky Carioti AFP/Getty Images ?? SINCE his inaugurati­on last week, President Trump has disputed some media estimates on the crowd size.
Ricky Carioti AFP/Getty Images SINCE his inaugurati­on last week, President Trump has disputed some media estimates on the crowd size.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States