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==== New Zealand ====
==== New Zealand ====
Due to time differences, the first marches held were in New Zealand. In [[Auckland]], more than 2,000 protesters participated in the Women's March and more than 700 in [[Wellington]]. Around 300 to 400 protesters reportedly attended rallies in [[Christchurch]], [[Dunedin]] and [[Invercargill]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/322798/nz-leads-marches-for-women's-rights |title=NZ leads marches for women's rights |date=January 20, 2017 |work=Radio New Zealand |accessdate=January 21, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/88642615/new-zealand-leads-global-marches-in-defence-of-womens-rights-after-donald-trumps-inauguration|title=New Zealand leads global marches in defence of women's rights after Donald Trump's inauguration|website=Stuff|access-date=2017-01-22}}</ref>
Due to time differences, the first marches held were in New Zealand. In [[Auckland]], more than 2,000 protesters participated in the Women's March and more than 700 in [[Wellington]]. Around 300 to 400 protesters reportedly attended rallies in [[Christchurch]], [[Dunedin]] and [[Invercargill]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/322798/nz-leads-marches-for-women's-rights |title=NZ leads marches for women's rights |date=January 20, 2017 |work=Radio New Zealand |accessdate=January 21, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/88642615/new-zealand-leads-global-marches-in-defence-of-womens-rights-after-donald-trumps-inauguration|title=New Zealand leads global marches in defence of women's rights after Donald Trump's inauguration|website=Stuff|access-date=2017-01-22}}</ref>7

==== Norway ====
An estimated 2000 men and women participated in a solidarity march concerning womens's rights in Oslo. Likewise, hundreds of people marched in Bergen and Tromsø.
<ref>http://www.vg.no/nyheter/innenriks/kvinner/2000-deltok-i-internasjonal-kvinnemarsj-i-oslo/a/23904137/</ref>


==== South Africa ====
==== South Africa ====

Revision as of 11:09, 22 January 2017

Women's March on Washington
Part of the Women's rights movement and protests against Donald Trump
DateJanuary 21, 2017
Location
Caused by
Goals
"Protection of our rights, our safety, our health, and our families -- recognizing that our vibrant and diverse communities are the strength of our country."[3]
Lead figures
Co-chairs
Honorary co-chairs
Number
Estimated 500,000 people (Washington marches)[7]

Estimated 2,000,000-3,000,000 (Across the US)

Estimated 4,000,000 people (worldwide)[8]
www.womensmarch.com

The Women's March was a political rally that took place in cities around the world on January 21, 2017 to promote women's rights, immigration reform, and LGBTQ rights, and to address racial inequities, workers' issues, and environmental issues. It was initially centered around Washington, D.C. and was known as the Women's March on Washington.[9] The march, organized as a grassroots movement, was on the day after the inauguration of President Donald J. Trump, whom protesters view as a major threat to their cause.[10] It aimed to "send a bold message to our new administration on their first day in office, and to the world that women's rights are human rights."[11] The march was streamed live in Washington, D.C. on YouTube,[12] Facebook, and Twitter.[13]

Marches occurred all around the world, with 408 marches reported in the US and 168 in other countries.[14] The march drew hundreds of thousands to D.C. alone, and millions worldwide.[15][16]

Background

Organizers initiated plans for the march on November 9, 2016, the day after Election Day.[17] Founders organized the march in reaction to Trump's campaign rhetoric, which they found divisive, racist, and misogynistic.[18][19]

Teresa Shook of Hawaii created a Facebook event and invited 40 of her friends to march on Washington to protest Trump's election. Similar Facebook pages created by Evvie Harmon, Fontaine Pearson, Bob Bland, Breanne Butler, and others quickly led to thousands of women signing up to march.[20][21][22][23] Harmon, Pearson, and Butler decided to unite their efforts and consolidate their pages, beginning the official Women's March on Washington.[20] To ensure that the march was led by women of differing races and backgrounds, Vanessa Wruble, co-founder and Head of Campaign Operations, brought on Tamika D. Mallory, Carmen Perez and Linda Sarsour to serve as National Co-Chairs alongside Bob Bland.[20][24]

Organizers state the march is not intended to target Trump but is "more about being proactive about women's rights", and, more broadly, "a stand on social justice and human rights issues ranging from race, ethnicity, gender, religion, immigration and healthcare".[4][25]

Organizers

Dolores Huerta in 2016

The four co-chairs are Linda Sarsour, the executive director of the Arab American Association of New York; Tamika Mallory, a political organizer and former executive director of the National Action Network; Carmen Perez, an executive director of the political action group The Gathering for Justice; and Bob Bland, a fashion designer who focuses on ethical manufacturing.[4][5] Vanessa Wruble, co-founder and co-president of Okayafrica, serves as Head of Campaign Operations.[24] Gloria Steinem, Harry Belafonte, LaDonna Harris, Angela Davis and Dolores Huerta are serving as honorary co-chairs.[26][6]

Throughout Donald Trump's campaign, he promised to defund Planned Parenthood as long as it performs abortions. Planned Parenthood has partnered with the march by providing staff and offering knowledge related to planning a large-scale event.[27] President Cecile Richards believes the march will “send a strong message to the incoming administration that millions of people across this country are prepared to fight attacks on reproductive healthcare, abortion services and access to Planned Parenthood." The organization "hopes that [in the future] many of the protesters will mobilize in its defense when Trump and congressional Republicans make their attempt to strip the organization of millions in federal funding." The national organizing director stressed the importance of continuing action at a local level and remaining active after the event.[4]

Name origin

File:Women's March on Washington logo.png
Logo for the Women's March

Originally billed as the "Million Women March",[28] the organizers eventually chose to call the event the Women's March on Washington after the March on Washington, a historic civil rights rally on the Mall where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech.[29] The rally will also pay tribute to the 1997 Million Woman March in Philadelphia, in which hundreds of thousands of African American women are said to have participated.

Policy platform

On January 12, the march organizers released a policy platform addressing reproductive rights, immigration reform, LGBTQ rights, gender and racial inequities, worker's issues, and others.[1][2]

Quoting Martin Luther King, "We cannot walk alone. And as we walk, we must make the pledge that we shall always march ahead. We cannot turn back," the organizers see the movement in the context of other past and ongoing movements for equality:

Our liberation is bound in each other's. The Women's March on Washington includes leaders of organizations and communities that have been building the foundation for social progress for generations. We welcome vibrant collaboration and honor the legacy of the movements before us – the suffragists and abolitionists, the Civil Rights Movement, the feminist movement, the American Indian Movement, Occupy Wall Street, Marriage Equality, Black Lives Matter, and more – by employing a decentralized, leader-full structure and focusing on an ambitious, fundamental and comprehensive agenda.[2]

The organizers also address environmental issues: "We believe that every person and every community in our nation has the right to clean water, clean air, and access to and enjoyment of public lands. We believe that our environment and our climate must be protected, and that our land and natural resources cannot be exploited for corporate gain or greed—especially at the risk of public safety and health."[2]

Participation

Partnerships

In late December, organizers announced that over 100 organizations would provide assistance during the march and support the event across their social media platforms.[30] By January 18, more than 400 organizations were listed as "partners" on the March's official website.[31][32]

Planned Parenthood and the Natural Resources Defense Council were listed as the two "premier partners".[31] Other organizations listed as partners included the AFL-CIO, Amnesty International USA, the Mothers of the Movement, the National Center for Lesbian Rights, the National Organization for Women (NOW), MoveOn.org, Chime For Change, Human Rights Watch, CODEPINK, Black Girls Rock, NAACP, the American Indian Movement, Emily's List, OXFAM, Greenpeace USA, and the League of Women Voters.[31][30][33][34][35]

Billionaire George Soros, one of Hillary Clinton’s largest donors, has ties to more than 50 of these partners.[36]

Speakers and attendees

File:Actress Scarlett Johansson Urges President Trump to Support Women's March.webm
Actress Scarlett Johansson
File:Madonna Tells Women's March DC Participants 'Good Will Win In The End'.webm
Singer Madonna

The official list of speakers included Cecile Richards; Ilyasah Shabazz; Janet Mock; LaDonna Harris; Maryum Ali; Rabbi Sharon Brous; Sister Simone Campbell; Sophie Cruz; America Ferrera; Angela Davis; Gloria Steinem; Ashley Judd; Scarlett Johansson; Melissa Harris-Perry; Michael Moore; Randi Weingarten; Van Jones; Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner; Roslyn Brock; Muriel Bowser, Mayor of the District of Columbia; California senator Kamala Harris, and Ai-jen Poo.[37]

Celebrities including Amy Schumer, Samantha Bee, Olivia Wilde, and Lupita Nyong'o declared their intention to attend the march.[4][38] On January 10, organizers announced that America Ferrera would serve as chair of the "Artist Table," and Chelsea Handler, Zendaya, Katy Perry, Madonna and Cher will participate.[39]

Demonstration paraphernalia

Signage

Personal, group, and collaborative projects for banner making and sign making for signs to carry or wear were organized spontaneously throughout the nation. Facebook friends took orders for T-shirts and other apparel to silk screen or paint. In Richmond, Virginia, attendees of the March on Washington participated in an "Art of Activism" series of workshops at Studio Two Three, a printmaking studio for artists in Scott's Addition.[40]

Pussyhat Project

Woman wearing a "pussyhat"

The Pussyhat Project is a nationwide effort to knit pink hats to be worn at the march.[41] Their name refers to the resemblance of the hats' corners to cat ears and attempts to reclaim the derogatory term "pussy," a play on Trump's widely-reported 2005 remarks that he would "grab [women] by the pussy." The hats' production has caused a shortage of pink wool knitting yarn.[42][43] On the day of the march, NPR compared the hats to the "Make America Great Again" hats worn by Trump supporters.[44]

Commentary

File:Activist Gloria Steinem Tells Women's March Protesters 'Put Our Bodies Where Our Beliefs Are'.webm
Gloria Steinem addressing crowds at the Women's March on Washington

Honorary co-chair Gloria Steinem commented: "Our constitution does not begin with 'I, the President.' It begins with, 'We, the People.' I am proud to be one of thousands who have come to Washington to make clear that we will keep working for a democracy in which we are linked as human beings, not ranked by race or gender or class or any other label."[4]

America Ferrara stated, "If we -- the millions of Americans who believe in common decency, in the greater good, in justice for all -- if we fall into the trap by separating ourselves by our causes and our labels, then we will weaken our fight and we will lose. But if we commit to what aligns us, if we stand together steadfast and determined, then we stand a chance of saving the soul of our country."[45]

'Protesters on why they are marching' video from Voice of America

Scarlett Johansson called for long-term change, "Once the heaviness [of the election] began to subside, an opportunity has presented itself to make real long-term change, not just for future Americans, but in the way we view our responsibility to get involved with and stay active in our communities. Let this weight not drag you down, but help to get your heels stuck in."[45]

After calling for participation immediately following the march to maintain the momentum created by the march,[46] Michael Moore said, "You have to run for office. Yes, you! I can see your faces. 'No, no Mike. Not me. I'm shy.' This is not the time for shy people. Shy people, you have two hours to get over it."[45]

Saying, "it is significant that it seems that [Donald Trump is] going after programs for violence against women," author Naomi Klein has stated that she believes that it is important for people to demonstrate their concern about the new administration's "drive to denigrate women." She also states that it is important that the women who are organizing the march includes a large number of women of color.[47]

While the march aims to create a social movement, Marcia Chatelain of Georgetown University's Center for Social Justice commented that its success will depend on the marchers' ability to maintain momentum in the following weeks. "One of the goals of any type of march or any type of visible sign of solidarity is to get inspired, to inspire people to do more. And the question is, at the march, what kind of organizational structures or movements will also be present to help people know how to channel their energy for the next day and for the long haul?" Historian Michael Kazin also commented on the importance of a long-term strategy: "All successful movements in American history have both inside and outside strategy. If you're just protesting, and it just stops there, you're not going to get anything done."[48]

Criticism

Critics of the march, writing before the release of its platform on January 12, 2017, claimed it would have little likelihood of success because its political goals were unclear or misplaced.[49][50]

Fox News reported that although it was called a women's rights protest, it was mainly an "anti-Trump" protest.[51]

Controversy regarding exclusion of pro-life groups

On January 13, New Wave Feminists, a pro-life feminist group, was granted partnership status by the event's organizers. However, after the organization's involvement was publicized in a piece in The Atlantic, New Wave Feminists was removed from the partners page on the march's website.[52] Other pro-life groups which had been granted partnership status, including Abby Johnson's And Then There Were None and Stanton Healthcare, were subsequently unlisted as partners as well. In spite of their rejection by event organizers, New Wave Feminists still took part in the official march, alongside other pro-life groups such as ATTWN, Students for Life of America, and Life Matters Journal.[53]

Location

Sister marches were organized in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, as well as in 55 global cities, including Tokyo, Sydney, Nairobi, Paris, and Bogotá.[48][54][55] On the morning of the march, people marched in Paris, London, Berlin, Amsterdam, Mexico City, Bangkok, Delhi, Cape Town, and other cities.[56]

United States

State Cities Photo Approximate attendance Notes
Washington, D.C. 500,000 By January 20, 2017, 222,000 people had RSVP'd as going to the Washington, D.C. march and 251,000 had indicated interest.[20][57][58] On January 16, 2017, Fox News reported that authorities were expecting a "a crowd of almost 500,000 people".[59] The permit for the march issued by the National Park Service initially estimated a turnout of 200,000 participants but on January 21, the head of DC's Homeland Security department revised that estimate to 500,000 people[60]—significantly more than the estimated attendance at President Donald Trump's inauguration ceremony the previous day.[61][62] Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe announced that he would attend the march instead of the inaugural parade. McAuliffe said he would be marching in Washington with his wife Dorothy, Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam and Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.[63]

Due to scheduling conflicts at the Lincoln Memorial,[64] a permit was secured on December 9 to start the march on Independence Avenue at the southwest corner of the Capitol building and continue along the National Mall.[65]

Alabama Birmingham 5,000 [66] The march started at Kelly Ingram Park, which is historically known as the epicenter for the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s.[67]
Alaska Anchorage 2,000 – 3,500 Thousands protested at the Delaney Park Strip.[68]
Cordova 112+ Women, men and children gathered on Main Street just before 10am to peacefully march in the rural Southcentral Alaskan town of Cordova.[citation needed]
Fairbanks 2,000 People rallied in subzero temperatures.[68]
Arizona Phoenix 20,000[69]
Tuscon 15,000 People turned out to peacefully show their support of rights for women, people of color, immigrants, people with disabilities, the LGBTQ community and other minorities.[70]
Arkansas Little Rock 7,000 Protesters marched to the Arkansas State Capitol Building.
California Los Angeles Over 100,000 The sister march is estimated to be the second largest Women's March nationwide.[71][72][73] Organizers estimated the turnout at 750,000.[74]
Oakland 100,000[75]
Sacramento 20,000[76]
San Diego 30,000 – 40,000 Another 3,000 people held a march in northern San Diego county in the city of San Marcos.[77][78]
San Francisco 50,000 The rally was held outside of the San Francisco City Hall, which was lit pink in observance of the protest.[79]
San Francisco Bay Area 5,000 + Outside of San Francisco, San Jose, and Oakland, people marched in Santa Rosa, California.[80] Around 10,000 marched in downtown Walnut Creek.[79]
Santa Ana 20,000[81]
Colorado Colorado Springs 7,000 People marched through downtown Colorado Springs.[82]
Denver 100,000[83] A protest occurred at the Civic Center.[84]
Connecticut Hartford 10,000 The march had the support of Governor Dannel Malloy.[85]
Stamford 5,000 People marched peacefully in Stamford, Connecticut, after a rally in the Mill River Park.[86] The protesters marched around the city blocks surrounding the Trump Parc Stamford building, a building owned by the Trump Organization[87], in a display of resistance to President Donald Trump's policies. The number of demonstrators was four times larger than organizers expected.[86]
Delaware Newark 1,000 IPeople participated in a 2.4 mile march.[88]
Florida Miami 10,000+ The demonstration at Bayfront Park in Miami, Florida reached capacity of more than 10,000 and demonstrators began flooding the streets.[89]
Sarasota, 10,000 Author Stephen King participated in the march.[90]
Georgia Atlanta 60,000[91] John Lewis attended the Atlanta rally, which saw more than 60,000 march to the Georgia State Capitol.[92]
Hawaii Downtown Honolulu Thousands of people marched.[93]
Idaho Boise 5,000[94] In initially heavy snow which turned to rain
Illinois Chicago 250,000[95] Organizers for the sister march in Chicago, Illinois, initially prepared for a crowd of 22,000.[96] An estimated 250,000 protesters[97] gathered in Grant Park for an initial rally to be followed by a march, with attendance far more than expected.[98] As a result, the official march was cancelled, although marchers then flooded the streets of the Chicago Loop.[99] Liz Radford, an organizer, informed the crowd, "We called, and you came. We have flooded the march route. We have flooded Chicago."[98]
Indiana Indianapolis 4,500-5,000[100] The protest at the Indiana State Capitol[101] is the largest rally in recent memory.[102]
South Bend A crowd that some estimate in the thousands gathered in front of the Morris Performing Arts Center for the march.[103]
Iowa Des Moines 5,000-10,000[104] The march near the Iowa State Capitol included women, men and children supporting women's rights and healthcare, environmental issues, and immigration. However, an updated count stated that an estimated 26,000 gathered.[105]
Kansas Kansas City 10,000[106] The demonstration was held at Washington Square Park in downtown Kansas City.[107]

Lansing-Thousands gathered at the Capitol in solidarity of all groups who have been marginalized by the actions of the man now leading this country.

Topeka 3,000[108]
Kentucky Louisville 5,000[109] People showed up at Louisville's Metro Hall for The Rally To Move Forward in Louisville, Kentucky.[110] Congressman John Yarmuth from Louisville was scheduled to speak.[111]
Louisiana New OrAleans 10,000–15,000[112]
Shreveport Hundreds of men, women and children marched around the Caddo Parish Courthouse, to express solidarity with the Women’s March on Washington.[citation needed]
Maine Portland 10,000+ People marched in one of the largest protest marches ever held in Portland. Marchers were five to six people abreast. In Maine, marches were also held Saturday in Augusta, Brunswick, Sanford and Kennebunk. The Portland march drew far more people than expected. Portland police said the size of the orderly protest crowd was “of historic proportions".[113]
Maryland
Massachusetts Boston 150,000[114] A women's march took place at the Boston Common in downtown Boston, Massachusetts. United States Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey spoke to the crowd.[115] An estimated 150,000[116] to 175,000[117] people attended.
Michigan Ann Arbor 11,000 Rep. Debbie Dingell speaking at Ann Arbor Women's March. Protester rallied in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and attended a speech afterwards by Congresswoman Debbie Dingell on the University of Michigan campus.[118]
Detroit 4,000 People protested at the campus of Wayne State University in Midtown Detroit.[119]
Houghton 500 + People participated in a march across the Portage Lake Lift Bridge between Houghton and Hancock in Michigan's largely conservative Upper Peninsula.[120]
Lansing 10,000
Minnesota Saint Paul, Minnesota 90,000 – 100,000 People marched to the Minnesota State Capitol from various parts of the city. A spokesman for the St. Paul Police stated it was the largest protest in the city since the 2008 Republican National Convention.[121]
Mississippi
Missouri Springfield 2,000+ People marched to Park Central Square in downtown Springfield. The parade made its way from the parking lot at Springfield's municipal court building, across the Martin Luther King Jr. Bridge and over to Park Central Square where several speakers addressed the crowd. The rally touched on political issues in addition to women's rights. One speaker, Bethany Johnson, a transgender woman, spoke and drew some of the loudest cheers. She also mentioned the 2015 vote that repealed the city's ordinance banning LGBT discrimination in the workplace. Johnson banged the podium and called on the marchers to contact their politicians.[122]
St. Louis 13,000 People marched peacefully in downtown St. Louis from Union Station to a rally at Luther Ely Smith Square.[123]
Montana Helena 10,000 People marched through the city and around the Montana State Capitol.[citation needed]
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey Asbury Park 7,000 Protesters marched in Asbury Park, New Jersey.[124]
New Mexico Albuquerque 10,000 Protesters rallied at the Civic Plaza.[125]
Las Cruces 1,500 More than 20 groups were involved in the march, which brought out 1,500[126]concerned residents.[127]
New York Buffalo 2,500 – 3,000 A march in Niagara Square drew demonstrators and local politicians.[128]
Ithaca 10,000 The demonstration began and ended on the Ithaca Commons.[129]
New York City In Manhattan, hundreds of thousands marched from the Headquarters of the United Nations to Donald Trump's home.[130] The Office of the Mayor of New York City announced that the number of attendees was over 400,000.[131]
Poughkeepsie 5,000 The march took place on the Walkway over the Hudson.[132]
North Carolina Raleigh 17,000 People demonstrated peacefully at the Raleigh Women's March. Congressman David Price also attended.[133]
North Dakota
Ohio Cincinnati 7,700 The Women's March started at noon at Washington Park, and after representatives from several civic groups spoke, the march started towards City Hall, and back to Washington Park.[134]
Oklahoma Oklahoma City 12,000+ Demonstrations were held in front of the Oklahoma State Capitol.[135]
Oregon Portland 100,000 People attended the Women's March in Portland.[136]
Salem 2,000 Governor Kate Brown participated in the march.[137]
Pennsylvania 50,000[138][139] The event included an actual march from Logan Square to Eakins Oval, and a rally at Eakins Oval.[citation needed]
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee Nashville 15,000 +[140]
Texas Austin 40,000-50,000 An estimated Women's March on Austin. The crowd gathered at the Texas State Capitol and marched through the streets of downtown Austin.[141][142]

The Austin Police Department confirmed to CBS Austin that they estimate 40,000 protesters have gathered around the Texas State Capitol.[143]

The march was endorsed by former Texas State Senator and 2014 Texas gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis, Texas Representative Senfronia Thompson, and author Lizzie Velasquez, who will also be giving speeches at the Texas State Capital in downtown Austin. Austin Mayor Steve Adler and U.S. Representative Lloyd Doggett were also in attendance.[144]

Organization such as Women Rising and Taylor Collective Solutions, Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas, Texas Freedom Network, Progress Texas and Annie's List also endorsed the march.

Dallas 10,000[145]
Denton A United Denton organized the Women's March to be held in Denton, Texas. The downtown square was packed by 12:30 pm.[145]
Houston 22,000 Protestors marched through downtown to City Hall.[146] Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner spoke out during the event.
Utah Park City Celebrities protested at the Sundance Film Festival against Trump and for women's rights. One of the messages was "Love Trumps Hate." Celebrities in attendance included Charlize Theron, Kristen Stewart, John Legend, Kevin Bacon, Chelsea Handler, and Benjamin Bratt. It was supported by Justice Party, Planned Parenthood Association of Utah, Equality Now, Sentry Financial, and other organizations.[147]
Vermont Montpelier 15,000-20,000 Bernie Sanders attended the event.[148]
Virginia Norfolk 2,000 Two groups marched separately with similar messages.[149] Both groups eventually joined up to complete the march together.[citation needed]
Washington Olympia 10,000[150]
Seattle 120,000 + The Women's March on Seattle march took place from Judkins Park to the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington. Participants filled the entire length of the 3.6-mile (5.8 km) route.[151][152]

Sound Transit and King County Metro rerouted many bus routes and added additional Link light rail service in anticipation of disruption to the city's transportation grid.[153]

For days, regional knitting shops were sold out of pink yarn used to make pussyhats crafted and worn by the protestors.[154]

The Seattle march was endorsed by Washington's U.S. Senator, Patty Murray, who said she would be physically present at the D.C. event.[155] The King County AFL-CIO chapter officially participated in the event.[156]

Richland 1,000 Organizers had originally expected 200 participants.[157]
Spokane 8,000[158]
Wenatchee < 2,000[159]
West Virginia
Wisconsin Madison 75,000 to 100,000[160] The protest occurred around the Wisconsin State Capitol and along State Street in Madison.[160]
Wyoming

Worldwide

Antarctica

At least thirty people traveled to Paradise Bay, Antarctica, for "pro-peace, pro-environment" march, highlighting the environmental issues that affect the Antarctica climate they feel is threatened by Trump's stated policies.[161][162]

Australia

In Sydney, Australia, 3,000 protesters gathered in Hyde Park.[163] One of the chants was "When women's rights are under attack, what do we do, stand up, fight back."[162] Some Australian Trump supporters paid a skywriting company $4,000 to write "TRUMP" in the sky during the march.[164] Protesters responded by giving the middle finger to the name in the sky.[165] About 5,000 people marched in Melbourne from the State Library of Victoria to Parliament House.[166]

Belgium

In Brussels, a candlelight vigil event called the "Lights for Rights" was held at the Place de la Monnaie square as part of the Women's March.[162]

Canada

More than thirty events were organized across Canada with at least twenty organized in the Province of British Columbia alone.[167] An estimated 60,000 people attended a rally at Toronto's Queen's Park in solidarity with the March on Washington.[168] In Vancouver, an estimated 15,000 people assembled in Jack Poole Plaza before parading through the downtown area.[169] Other cities included: Balfour, Bowen Island, Calgary, Castlegar, Charlottetown, Courtenay, Edmonton, Fredericton, Gabriola Island, Grand Forks, Halifax, Hamilton, Kamloops, Kelowna, Kimberly, Kingston, Kootenay Bay, Lethbridge, London, Montréal, Nanaimo, North West River, Orangedale, Ottawa, Prince George, Revelstoke, Roberts Creek, St. Catharines, Saint John, Salmon Arm, Salt Spring Island, Saskatoon, St. John's, Sutton, Sydney, Tofino, Victoria, Winnipeg, and Yellowknife.[168][170][171]

Hundreds of Canadians are estimated to have travelled to Washington, D.C. to attend the rally.[172][173] A number of Canadians heading to the United States to attend other protests and rallies were turned away at the Canada–United States border.[174][175] In at least one case border agents went through the individual's email and Facebook before denying them entry.[174]

Czech Republic

Protesters gathered in Czech Republic.[162]

Denmark

Police estimated that 5,000 people[citation needed] marched in Copenhagen, Denmark, from the U.S. Embassy to the seat of the Danish Parliament, Christiansborg Palace.[176][177]

France

File:Women's March (VOA) 20.jpg
Women's March in Paris
Part of the 2017's Women's March on Washington action day

In Paris, more than 7,000 protesters gathered for a solidarity march with the Washington protesters.[178][179] There were also protesters for women's rights in Bordeaux, Marseille, and Toulouse.[162]

Germany

In Germany, there were seven registered marches related to the Women's March on Washington, including Berlin, Bonn, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt am Main, Heidelberg and Munich. Police estimated that around 2,100 demonstrators attended the March in Frankfurt and 800 in Heidelberg.[180][181]

The march concluded in front of the Old St Nicholas Church in the Altstadt of Frankfrut.

Greece

Protesters gathered in Greece.[162]

Iceland

In Reykjavik around 200 people showed up to protest in solidarity with the Women's March on Washington.[182]

India

Over 20 cities across the country, such as Bangalore, Kolkata, and New Delhi observed women's marches in solidarity against the issue of rape, as well as following the Women's March itself. The protests and marches also used the hashtag #IWillGoOut.[183][184]

Italy

Protesters gathered outside the Pantheon in Rome. Their messages included "Women's rights are human rights" and "Yes we must".[162]

Ireland

In Dublin, thousands gathered to march down O'Connell Street. Though the march was originally planned to conclude with a rally at the General Post Office, crowds became so large it had to be moved to Parnell Square. The march was organized by the Abortion Rights Campaign, Amnesty International Ireland, European Network Against Racism, ROSA, and The Coalition to Repeal the 8th. Events were also planned in Galway and Castlebar.[185]

Japan

Around 650 people, mostly expats and women, marched in Tokyo's Hibiya Park, far exceeding the 150 who registered. The event was organized by Erica Summers, a Los Angeles resident who was traveling abroad at the time of the March of Washington, with assistance from Democrats Abroad.[186]

Kenya

Women's March in Karura Forest, Nairobi

Hundreds of protestors marched in Karura Forest, Nairobi.[187]

Kosovo

Protesters gathered in Kosovo.[162]

Mexico

In Mexico City, a demonstration was held at the United States Embassy, followed by a large march went from to the Angel of Independence by Mexicans and Americans, who protested against President Trump and Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, who has only a 12% approval rating. They called for gender equality and women's rights.[162][188]

Netherlands

In Amsterdam, 3,000 protesters gathered for a solidarity march with the Washington protesters.[189] In the Hague, hundreds of protestors walked from Maliveld to the US Embassy.[190]

New Zealand

Due to time differences, the first marches held were in New Zealand. In Auckland, more than 2,000 protesters participated in the Women's March and more than 700 in Wellington. Around 300 to 400 protesters reportedly attended rallies in Christchurch, Dunedin and Invercargill.[191][192]7

Norway

An estimated 2000 men and women participated in a solidarity march concerning womens's rights in Oslo. Likewise, hundreds of people marched in Bergen and Tromsø. [193]

South Africa

In Cape Town, women gathered at Company's Garden for a solidarity march with the Washington protesters.[194] In addition to questioning Trump's leadership, one of the messages was "Climate change is a women's issue".[162]

South Korea

In Seoul, a thousand of protesters gathered and marched in the snow to send messages about Women's rights and Human rights.[195]

Sweden

In Stockholm, thousands of people, mostly women, gathered at Norrmalmstorg for a solidarity march with the Washington protesters.[196]

Switzerland

In Geneva, an estimated 3,000 protesters gathered to march across the Pont du Mont-Blanc bridge and along the Lake Geneva shoreline for a solidarity march with the Washington protesters.[197]

United Kingdom

Crowds listen to speakers at a sister march in Liverpool, England.

In the United Kingdom, close to 100,000 protesters marched 2 miles (3.2 km) in London from Grosvenor Square in Mayfair, past the US embassy and onto Trafalgar Square.[162][198] Speakers included Sandi Toksvig and Yvette Cooper.[199] Issues included women's, worker's, and LGBT rights, as well as Brexit.[162] Marches also occurred in Belfast, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Lancaster, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester and Southampton.[200]

Gallery

See also

External videos
video icon "Women's March on Washington", January 21, 2017, C-SPAN[201]

Historic marches

References

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