Post by FPPPost by Just WonderingPost by FPPPost by Just WonderingPost by Leroy N. SoetoroIf you want to get an idea of just how high tensions are running in
Portland, Ore., where rival protest groups have clashed repeatedly in
recent months, you could start by looking at the caches of weapons
seized by police at a demonstration over the weekend in the city’s
downtown. There are axes and crowbars, dozens of sticks and makeshift
clubs,canisters of mace, knives, hammers, batons and even a set of
brass knuckles.
It just goes to show, Oregon needs to pass some more of them
there gun control law thingies. That should stop the proliferation
of non-firearm weapons. After all, gun control is always the
solution, right?
Well, doing what we're doing is definitely NOT working.
What's your great idea?
For one thing, stop scapegoating guns (and knives, pointy
sticks etc.) and address the actual causes of violence.
In this case, it looks like people who lost at the ballot box
think they can "win" (if you can call it "winning") by throwing
tantrums. People like that are spoiled children in adult bodies.
They need to learn how to handle disappointment like grownups.
One thing that would help is to get the news media and entertainment
industry to stop fanning the flames. How to accomplish THAT is
beyond my pay grade.
What tantrums?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_protests_against_Donald_Trump
Post-election protests
March against Trump in Saint Paul, Minnesota on November 9
Following the announcement of Trump's election victory, large protests
broke out across the United States including other countries such as
Canada, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Philippines, Australia, Israel
with some continuing for several days, and more protests planned for the
following weeks and months.
Protest outside Trump Tower, Chicago on November 9, 2016
November 9
Locations of protests against Donald Trump on November 9, 2016
Map of the United States
Atlanta
Atlanta
Ann Arbor
Ann Arbor
Chicago
Chicago
Cleveland
Cleveland
Dallas
Dallas
Dallas
Dallas
Detroit
Detroit
Houston
Houston
Las Vegas
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Miami
Miami
Nashville
Nashville
New York
New York
Oakland
Oakland
Omaha
Omaha
Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Phoenix
Portland
Portland
Portland
Portland
Providence
Providence
Reno
Reno
Richmond
Richmond
San Diego
San Diego
San Francisco
San Francisco
San Jose
San Jose
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City
Seattle
Seattle
Syracuse
Syracuse
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
Winston-Salem
Winston-Salem
Des Moines
Des Moines
Thousands of protesters took to the street in Chicago. Chicago
Tribune explains that the protest was "relatively peaceful" and was
"devoid of any of the heavy vandalism of effigy burning that occurred
elsewhere." Five people were arrested altogether.[89][90][91]
Atlanta, Georgia[92]
Boston, Massachusetts[93]
Cleveland, Ohio[94]
Dallas, Texas[95]
Detroit, Michigan[96]
Houston, Texas[97]
Los Angeles, California[98]
Miami, Florida[99]
New York City, New York[100]
Oakland, California[101]
Omaha, Nebraska[102]
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[103]
Portland, Oregon[104]
Richmond, Virginia[105]
San Diego, California[106]
San Francisco, California[101]
San Jose, California[106]
Seattle, Washington[98]
Washington, D.C.[107]
Winston-Salem, North Carolina[108]
Protests also occurred at various universities, including:
Arizona State University[109]
Fisk University[110]
University of Kentucky[111]
University of Michigan[112]
University of Pittsburgh[113]
High school and college students walked out of classes to
protest.[98][114] The protests were mostly peaceful, although at some
protests fires were lit, flags were burned, and a Trump piñata was
burned.[115][116][117]
Celebrities such as Madonna, Cher, and Lady Gaga took part in New
York.[118][119][120] Some protesters took to blocking freeways in Los
Angeles, San Diego, and Portland, Oregon, and were dispersed by police
in the early hours of the morning.[121][122] One protester was hit by a
car.[123] In a number of cities, protesters were dispersed with rubber
bullets, pepper spray and bean-bags fired by police.[124][125][126]
While protests ended at 3:00 a.m. in New York City, calls were made to
continue the protests over the coming days.[127]
November 10
Protesters gathered at Trump Tower in New York on November 10.
File:Madison WI protest Donald-HD.webmPlay media
Protests in Madison, Wisconsin
"Love Trumps Hate" was a common slogan, as here at the Idaho State Capitol.
As Trump held the first transition meeting with President Obama at
the White House, protesters were outside.[128] Protests continued in
cities across the United States. International protests were held in
London, Vancouver, and Manila.[129][130] Former New York mayor Rudy
Giuliani called protesters "a bunch of spoiled cry-babies."[131] Los
Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti expressed understanding of the protests and
praised those who peacefully wanted to make their voices heard.[132]
In Austin, Texas, a young girl rallied protesters behind the
mantra: "I am a female, I am mixed race, I am a child and I cannot vote.
But that will not stop me from getting heard" after which chants of
"Love is love, and love trumps hate" followed.[133][134][135][136] In
Los Angeles, protesters continued blocking freeways.[137] A peaceful
protest turned violent when a small group began rioting and attacking
police in Portland, Oregon.[138] The protests in Portland attracted over
4,000 people and remained largely peaceful, but took to the highway and
blocked traffic.[139] Acts of vandalism including a number of smashed
windows, vandalized vehicles, and a dumpster fire caused police to
declare a riot.[139][140] Protesters tried to retain the peaceful nature
of the protest and chanted "peaceful protest".[141]
Protests were held in the following cities:
Chicago, Illinois[142]
Dallas, Texas[95]
Grand Rapids, Michigan[143]
Greensboro, North Carolina[144]
Louisville, Kentucky[145]
Madison, Wisconsin[146]
Milwaukee, Wisconsin[147]
Minneapolis, Minnesota[148]
New York City, New York[100]
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[149]
Pittsburg, California[142]
Portland, Oregon[150]
Richmond, Virginia[105]
Tampa, Florida[151]
Numerous petitions were started to prevent Trump from taking
office; including a Change.org petition started by Elijah Berg of North
Carolina requesting that faithless electors in states that Trump won
vote for Clinton instead, which surpassed three million signatures.[152]
November 11
Protests occurred in the following cities:
Anchorage, Alaska[153]
Atlanta, Georgia[154]
Bakersfield, California[155]
Burlington, Vermont[156]
Columbia, South Carolina[157]
Columbus, Ohio[158]
Dallas, Texas[159]
Denver, Colorado[160]
Des Moines, Iowa[161]
Eugene, Oregon[162]
Fort Worth, Texas[163]
Grand Rapids, Michigan[164]
Iowa City, Iowa[165]
Los Angeles, California[166]
Nashville, Tennessee[110]
New Haven, Connecticut[167]
New York, New York[100]
Olympia, Washington[168]
Orlando, Florida[167]
Royal Oak, Michigan[169]
San Antonio, Texas [170]
Protests also occurred at the following schools:
Ohio State University[171]
State University of New York at New Paltz[172]
Texas State University[173]
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign[174]
University of Massachusetts Amherst[175][176]
University of Miami[177]
University of North Carolina, Greensboro[178]
University of North Carolina, Wilmington[179]
University of Pacific[180]
University of Rochester[181]
Vanderbilt University[182]
Virginia Commonwealth University[183]
Wayne State University[184]
Wesleyan University[185]
A protest also occurred at the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv,
Israel.[186][187] The American and Mexican national soccer teams also
posed together in a Unity Wall in response to Trump's election before
their World Cup qualifying match in Columbus, Ohio.[188]
Michael Moore at the march against Trump, New York City, November 12, 2016
November 12
File:Protests in Los Angeles.webmPlay media
News report about the protests in Los Angeles on November 12 from Voice
of America
During a peaceful march in Oregon in the early hours of November
12, one protester was shot by an unknown assailant.[189] Police in
Portland, Oregon, said that they arrested over than twenty people after
protesters refused to disperse.[190]
Protesters at an anti-Trump rally in Indianapolis on November 12
On the first weekend day after the election, a march of over 10,000
people in Los Angeles went from MacArthur Park and shut down the busy
Wilshire Blvd corridor.[191][192] In New York City, another crowd cited
by NBC News as 25,000[193] marched from Union Square to Trump
Tower.[194][195][196] In Chicago, thousands of people marched through
The Loop.[197] In Indianapolis, about 500 people gathered at the
Statehouse, then proceeded to march downtown.[198] Protesters split off
into several groups, some of which moved to the streets and blocked
traffic.[199] Some protesters were allegedly throwing rocks at police
officers, who responded by firing non-lethal weapons.[200]
International protests also occurred in cities such as Berlin,
Germany, Melbourne, Australia and Perth, Australia and Auckland, New
Zealand.[201][202][203][204]
November 13
Protests continued in the following cities:
Chicago, Illinois[205]
Denver, Colorado[206]
Erie, Pennsylvania[193]
Fort Lauderdale, Florida[193]
Los Angeles, California[193]
Manchester, New Hampshire[207]
New Haven, Connecticut[193]
New York City, New York[193]
Oakland, California[193]
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[193]
Royal Oak, Michigan[208]
San Francisco, California[193]
Springfield, Massachusetts[193]
San Antonio, Texas [209]
International protests occurred in cities including Toronto,
Canada, where about a thousand people gathered in Nathan Phillips
Square.[210][211]
File:WATCH - Anti-Trump protest in Washington suburb.webmPlay media
Anti-Trump protest in Silver Spring, Maryland[212]
November 14
A group of 40 protesters in Washington, D.C. staged a sit-in at
the office of prospective Senate minority leader Charles Schumer, in an
effort to change Democratic leadership and prevent the party's
collaboration with Trump. Seventeen arrests were made at that sit-in.[213]
At a small protest at Ohio State University, protest leader
Timothy Adams was attacked from behind and knocked down to the steps he
was standing on, breaking his bullhorn and glasses.[214][215]
Several school districts experienced walkouts from high school
students, many of them too young to have voted.[216]
File:Wilson High School Students Protest Trump.webmPlay media
Wilson High School students protest outside Trump Hotel in Washington,
D.C. News report from Voice of America.
November 15 – Protests occurred in the following cities and
universities:
Akron, Ohio[217]
Beltsville, Maryland[218]
Kalamazoo, Michigan[219]
Montgomery County, Maryland[220]
New York City[221]
Santa Barbara, California[222]
Washington, D.C.[221][223]
La Salle University[224]
Penn State University[225]
Rutgers University[226]
St. Mary's College of California[227]
Stanford University[228]
University of California, Riverside[229]
University of Chicago[230]
University of Illinois at Chicago[231]
Protesters in Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey
November 16
Student protests continued for a third day in Montgomery
County, Maryland.[220]
Students around the country walked out of classes in an effort
to push their schools to declare themselves a "sanctuary campus" from
Trump's planned immigration policy of mass deportations.[232] The
Stanford, Rutgers, and St. Mary's protests on November 15 were among the
first.[227] Rutgers President Robert Barchi responded that the school
will protect the privacy of its undocumented immigrants.[233] California
State University Chancellor Timothy P. White made a similar
affirmation.[234] Iowa State University reaffirmed continuation of their
already existing policy.[235]
Around 350 Harvard University faculty members signed a letter
urging the administration to denounce hate speech, protect student
privacy, reaffirm admissions and financial aid policies and to make the
university a sanctuary. One of the first to sign the letter was Henry
Louis Gates Jr.[236]
The letters of Trump's name were removed from three buildings
in Manhattan, including Trump Place due to angered residents.[237]
November 17
Protest in Mission District, San Francisco, California on November 17
In the early morning in Los Angeles, protesters chanted "Fire
Bannon" in reference to Trump appointing Steve Bannon as chief White
House strategist and senior counselor on Sunday.[238][239] Bannon denied
accusations of his being a white nationalist, saying "I'm a
nationalist."[240][241]
Two students were arrested at a protest at the University of
Pittsburgh[242]
A rally was held at the University of Miami[243]
Around 100 students protested at Portland State University[244]
November 18
File:Protest against Donald Trump in Chapel Hill 3.ogvPlay media
Anti-Trump protest in Chapel Hill, North Carolina on November 18
Various protests occurred in Augusta, Maine,[245] Chapel Hill,
North Carolina,[246] Cleveland, Ohio,[247][248] Prince George's County,
Maryland,[249] Sacramento, California,[250] and Washington, D.C.[251]
Vice President-elect Mike Pence attended the musical Hamilton
in New York City, where he was addressed by the cast.[252]
November 19
Protesters in Chicago on November 19, Marching toward Trump Tower Chicago
Protesters at an anti-Trump rally in San Francisco
File:Philadelphia anti Trump Rally - unedited footage.webmPlay media
Philadelphia anti-Trump Rally on November 19, 2016
About 3,000 formed a hand holding ring around Green Lake in
Seattle, Washington.[253]
In Chicago, approximately 2,000 protesters marched from Federal
Plaza to Trump Tower Chicago.[254][255][256][257]
Several hundred protesters rallied and marched in downtown San
Francisco.[258]
In New York City, three separate protests converged on the
heavily secured area surrounding Trump Tower in New York City, where
security guided them into a demonstration pen that had been erected
outside of the president elect's offices and residence. One group
marched from Queens.[259] One group protesting Trump's appointment of
Bannon marched from Washington Square Park. A smaller but more dramatic
group wearing stage special effects makeup of wounds and scars, marched
from Union Square to indicate the damage a Trump administration will
have on "marginalized people" including women.[260]
International protests occurred in Toronto, Canada;[261]
Melbourne, Australia;[262] and Paris, France.[263]
November 20
A 69-year-old man dressed in a U.S. Marine uniform set himself
alight in the Highland Square in Akron, Ohio, after ranting about the
need to protest Trump's election. He was hospitalized in stable
condition.[264][265]
A protest in Brooklyn Heights attracted Adam Horovitz to Adam
Yauch Park (a park named after his late-Beastie Boys bandmate), where
multiple spray-painted swastikas and the message “Go Trump" had been
discovered two days before.[266] At the protest, Horovitz released a
statement against Trump.[267]
An anti-Trump group called "Not Up For Grabs: Portland" marched
in Portland, Oregon.[268]
During a live performance on the American Music Awards of 2016,
Green Day performed their new song Bang Bang. In the middle of the song,
lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong included the anti-Trump chant "No
Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA!"[269]
November 21
A rally was held outside the Rhode Island State House in
Providence, Rhode Island.[270]
A protest was held in front of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus,
Ohio.[271]
Protests continued outside Portland City Hall in Portland,
Oregon, and a march was held later in the evening.[272]
November 22 – Students at Christopher Newport University
protested.[273]
Protest in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 23
November 23 – A protest occurred in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The
protesters called for President Obama to pardon all immigrants before
the end of his term.[274]
November 25 – On Black Friday, protesters blocked entrances to
stores on the Magnificent Mile in Chicago.[275]
November 26 – A small protest occurred at Pioneer Courthouse Square
in Portland, Oregon. Protester Bobby Lang said, "It's either sit in
horror or go out and do things."[276]
November 27 – A protest occurred at the Nebraska State Capitol
building.[277] The crowd was estimated at around 200 people.[278]
December 8 – There was controversy about the inaugural permitting
for protests.[279] Hundreds of thousands of people have organized on
Facebook to attend.[280] Partnership for Civil Justice Fund for the
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition has a lawsuit pending about protest near the
Trump Hotel.[281]
December 18 – On International Migrants Day approximately 2,000
people marched peacefully in downtown Los Angeles against Trump's
policies on immigration, the environment and healthcare.[282]
December 19 – On the day the United States Electoral College
convened protests were held at numerous state capitols, including but
not limited to those of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Tennessee,[283]
and Idaho.[284]
January 3 – Five men, including NAACP president Cornell William
Brooks, and one woman held a sit-in at Jeff Sessions' office in Mobile,
Alabama, intending to stay until Sessions withdrew his name for
consideration as United States Attorney General or they were
arrested.[285] The sit-in started at 11:00 AM and ended at 6:30 PM when
the protesters were arrested.[286]
January 14 – About 2,000 protesters, most of them African-American,
marched through rain near the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial to demand
protection of civil rights and voting rights.[287]
January 19
The night before the inauguration, hundreds of people protested
outside the Trump International Hotel and Tower in New York City.[288]
During the DeploraBall in Washington, D.C., hundreds of
anti-Trump protesters demonstrated outside of the National Press
Building.[289]
Protests during the presidency
Protest in Chicago on January 20
January 20 – Fifty women from El Paso, Texas and Ciudad Juárez,
demonstrated against the proposed wall and the Trump Administration
immigration policies by standing on the US/Mexico border, linked by
hands and braiding scarves or hair together between 7am and
9am.[290][291] The women were part of an organization called Boundless
Across Borders.[291]
January 20, inauguration – Multiple protests took place in
connection with the inauguration of Donald Trump as the President of the
United States of America.[292]
Women's March in Washington D.C.
January 21, Women's Marches – A series of political rallies known
as Women's Marches took place in locations around the world.[293][294]
Estimates suggest between 3.3 and 4.6 million people took part, making
it the largest protest in United States history.[295]
January 25 – Seven Greenpeace members climbed a construction crane
belonging to Clark Construction and displayed a large banner saying
"Resist", blocking traffic and interrupting work on a new office
building a half mile from The White House.[296]
File:Trump Immigration Order Sparks Protests at NY
Airport.webmhd.webmPlay media
'Trump Immigration Order Sparks Protests at NY Airport' report from
Voice of America
January 28 – Protests occurred at airports across the US,[297]
including O'Hare International Airport in Chicago,[298] JFK Airport in
New York, SFO in San Francisco,[298][299] LAX in Los Angeles[300] and
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.[301]
January 29 – Protests against executive order 13769, banning
travelers and refugees from certain countries continue at airports and
public spaces, continue in the United States[302][303][304] and
internationally.[305]
January 30 – A protest occurred at the U.S. Consulate in Toronto,
Canada in the wake of Trump's executive order on immigration.[306] A
demonstration by Democrats was held outside of the Supreme Court to
protest the executive order.[307] Across major cities in the United
Kingdom, large crowds varying from over 200 people, protested against
the Trump Administration's order on banning travellers and refugees from
certain countries, as well supporting the petition to ban the Trump
state visit to the U.K, which gathered over one million signatures in
two days.[308][309]
January 31 – Protests against Executive Order 13769 continue. In
Las Cruces, New Mexico, demonstrators showed up outside the Islamic
Center to show support for the Muslim community.[310]
February 2017
February 2 – Yemeni business owners in New York City shut down
their various businesses from noon until 8pm to protest executive order
13769.[311] Thousands of Comcast employees in Portland, Washington,
D.C., Philadelphia and Sunnyvale walked off the job in protest of the
same executive order.[312] An LGBT anti-Trump rally was held in West
Hollywood.[313] Some Baltimore residents protested both against this
executive order and against "alleged drafts of orders" that might target
LGBT rights.[314]
February 3 – Mock vigils for the Bowling Green Massacre, a
fictitious event accidentally created by Kellyanne Conway while
defending executive order 13769 took place in Bowling Green,
Kentucky[315] and at Bowling Green train station in New York
City.[316][317] An LGBT "dance protest" was held outside the Trump
International Hotel in downtown Washington, D.C., with several hundred
participants.[318]
Protests in St. Louis
LGBT Solidarity Rally on February 4
February 4 – Protests occurred near Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in
Palm Beach.[319] Between 1,200[319] and 2,000 protesters attended,
starting outside Trump Plaza and continuing on Flagler Drive.[320]
Protests also occurred in Toronto,[321] San Francisco,[322] and London
against the travel ban.[323] The London protest also objected to Trump's
upcoming state visit.[323] Outside of the Stonewall Inn, thousands of
LGBTQ supporters protested against Trump.[324][325]
February 5 – Protests outside of Super Bowl LI took place in
Houston.[326] Hundreds attended a march going from Hermann Park to NRG
Stadium.[327] In Los Angeles, around 1,500 demonstrators protested
against the Dakota and Keystone XL pipeline project.[328]
February 6 – Around 200 people protested outside of the Trump
International Hotel in Manhattan against Executive Order 13769.[329]
Twenty rabbis were arrested in the protest.[329]
February 7 – Protesters in New York marched outside of Goldman
Sachs' headquarters to protest "Wall Street's involvement in President
Donald Trump's administration."[330]
February 10 – Thousands of protesters in Iran demonstrated against
Trump in Azadi Square on the anniversary of the Islamic Revolution.[331]
February 11 – Thousands gather at Ocean Beach in San Francisco and
spell out the word "Resist !!", with overflow crowds creating an
underline.[332] In Scotland, protesters in Edinburgh demonstrate against
Trump.[333] Protests also occurred in Prague.[334] Thousands protested
in Raleigh in support of LGBT rights and against Trump.[335]
February 12 – Thousands in cities across Mexico took to the streets
in protest against Trump's attitude towards Mexicans and his proposed
border wall.[336] Hundreds of protesters in Chicago lined up along the
Chicago River and then mooned Trump Tower.[337]
February 13 – The "Day Without Latinos" strike in Milwaukee
protested both Trump-supporter, Sheriff David Clarke and the Trump
administration's aggressive moves on immigrants.[338] Students at Howard
University protested Betsy Devos's visit to the campus and have asked
campus administration to block President Trump from visiting.[339]
February 14 – A protest against the Trump administration took place
in Rochester.[340]
February 16 – A Day Without Immigrants took place around the United
States where immigrants stayed home from school, work and did not spend
money in order to show their impact on society. The protest was in
response to the Trump administration's stance on immigration and
increased federal raids.[341]
Day Without Immigrants 2017 – Protesters in Washington, D.C.
February 17 – General strike (see also: Day Without Immigrants
2017), prior to President's Day.[342][343] Hundreds of people
demonstrated against the Trump administration in Washington Square
Park.[343]
February 18 – Anti-Trump protesters demonstrated in a peaceful
protest outside of a Trump rally held at the Orlando-Melbourne
International Airport.[344] In New York, a staged funeral to "mourn the
death of the U.S. presidency took place in Washington Square Park.[345]
February 19 – Over 1,000 people participated in the "I Am a Muslim
Too" rally at Times Square.[346] The event was organized by Russell
Simmons and several religious leaders of different faiths.[346] Boston
held a rally in support of science and the environment.[345]
File:Not My President's Day Protest VOA.webmPlay media
'Not My President's Day Protest' video from Voice of America
February 20 – Not My Presidents Day, thousands of protesters in
cities around the country demonstrated against Trump.[347]
February 21 – Protesters participated in a "Resist Trump Tuesday"
protest in Chicago where 8 clergy members of different faiths were
arrested.[348]
February 22 – After the Trump administration rescinded the
protections for transgender students to use school restrooms that
correspond to their gender identity, protests took place. [349] There
were around 200 people demonstrating in front of the White House in
support of transgender students' rights.[350] The city council of
Richmond, California passed a resolution which supported an
investigation of Trump in relation to the Foreign Emoluments Clause of
the Constitution.[351]
February 24 – The United Talent Agency (UTA), which had already
cancelled its Oscars party, hosted a rally against Trump, called "United
Voices."[352] The event helped raise $320,000 for the ACLU and the
International Rescue Committee.[352] At the rally were Jodie Foster,
Michael J. Fox, Keegan-Michael Key and other celebrities.[353] There
were nearly 2,000 attendees.[352]
February 27 – A peaceful protest that stopped some traffic occurred
in Minneapolis in the evening. The protest drew between 150 and 200
demonstrators who protested Trump and were in support of $15 minimum
wage.[354]
February 28 – Protesters in Vancouver demonstrated anti-Trump
sentiment during the grand opening of the Trump hotel in Vancouver.[355]
Outside the White House, despite pouring rain, Rosie O'Donnell led a few
hundred protesters against Trump.[356]
March 2017
March 1 – Protests against Trump using the hashtag,
#CampusResistance, occurred on college campuses across the United
States.[357]
March 2 – Employees of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
protested proposed budget cuts for their department. There were a "few
dozen" protesters at the Federal Plaza in Chicago.[358]
March 3 – Around 1,000 protesters in Chicago demonstrated for
transgender rights and against the Trump administration.[359] In Palm
Beach, around 100 protesters demonstrated against Trump, and one
protester was arrested and given a traffic ticket and then released.[360]
March 4 – Counter-protesters at Pro-Trump rallies (Spirit of
America) occurred on March 4, with one protest, at Berkeley, becoming a
violent clash between pro and anti-Trump groups.[361] Ten people were
arrested in connection with the violence and the protest briefly shut
down the BART station at Berkeley.[362] In Minneapolis, anti-Trump and
pro-Trump supporters also clashed and six people were arrested for
setting off firecrackers.[363]
March 6 – A rally held outside of the White House against the new
travel ban. Tom Perez was one of the speakers.[364]
March 8 – A Day Without a Woman, a call for women not to work on
International Women's Day.[365]
March 10 – Thousands of protesters marched from the US Army Corps
of Engineers headquarters to the White House to protest the Dakota
Pipeline decision by Trump.[366]
March 12 – In Baltimore, several groups protested the revised
travel ban.[367] On Sunday morning, an anonymous environmental group
carved the message "NO MORE TIGERS. NO MORE WOODS." into the greens of
the Trump National Golf Club in Rancho Palos Verdes.[368] On the same
day, in Brentwood, Los Angeles, roughly 50–60 people protested outside
the offices of Breitbart News aiming to "hold the Trump Administration
accountable for its unprecedented assault on the free press."[369]
March 14 – Tech industry workers protested Trump's policies on Pi
Day.[370] There were a few hundred protesters in Palo Alto.[371]
March 15 – Hundreds of protesters demonstrated outside of a Trump
rally in Nashville.[372] A physician, Carol Paris, interrupted the rally
with a sign reading "Improved Medicare for All" and when she was met
with boos from the crowd, Trump stopped speaking and she was asked to
leave.[373] In Detroit, about 300 protesters demonstrated at the Willow
Run Airport and denounced Trump's environmental policies.[374]
March 17 – A small protest against Trump took in took place in
Aspen.[375] In New York, the "Irish Stand" event took place. It was led
by Aodhán Ó Riordáin in Riverside Church and opposed Trump's stance on
immigration.[376]
March 18 – Protests in London, Cardiff and Glasgow against Brexit
and Trump's "anti-migrant hysteria."[377]
March 20 – Hundreds of protesters on Monday waved signs and gave
fiery speeches at the gates to Freedom Hall ahead President Donald
Trump's visit to tout his plan to replace Obamacare, booing as Air Force
One passed overhead for landing. [378][379]
March 21 – In opposition to "Trump Care," around 300 protesters
held a "die-in" outside of the office of Representative Darrell Issa in
Vista, California.[380]
March 25 – Trump supporters clashed with Protesters after the Trump
supporters path were blocked by the protesters.[381]
March 28 – Anti-Trump Protesters Gather Outside Senator Cornyn’s
Houston Office and voice their opinion.[382]
April 2017
Tax March demonstrators outside the United States Capitol
April 1 – Hundreds of protesters showed up for a "dance party"
protest outside of Ivanka Trump's Washington, D.C. home.[383]
April 2 – Around 300 people, both pro and anti Trump came to a
rally at Esther Short Park.[384]
April 3 – Protesters displayed a banner with the words "Impeach
Trump" at the opening day game at Nationals Park.[385]
April 4 – Movie theaters across the United States and in five other
countries screened 1984 in a protest against Donald Trump.[386][387]
April 9 – More than 3,000 people came to the Dallas MegaMarch
demonstration to protest Trump's immigration policies.[388][389]
Protests against Trump's strike on Syria occurred in Milwaukee.[390]
April 10 – Children and young adults from the group, We Belong
Together, start their spring break trip to Washington D.C. to protest
Trump. They first protested on Monday outside of Mayor Carlos Gimenez's
office because the mayor of Miami-Dade County has agreed to work with
Trump.[391]
April 11 – Protests against both Trump and Representative Marsha
Blackburn took place in Clarksville, Tennessee.[392]
April 12 – The "first protest in space" was carried out by the
Autonomous Space Agency Network (ASAN) by printing a tweet against Trump
and flown into the near-space atmosphere.[393]
April 13 – Around 25 protesters from the group, "Rise and Resist"
were arrested while protesting immigration policies at Trump Tower.[394]
Around 200 young people and other activists from We Belong Together
protested in front of the White House.[395]
April 15 – The Tax March demanded that Donald Trump release his tax
returns. Thousands attended rallies and marches held throughout the
U.S.[396][397] At least 21 people were arrested as Trump supporters and
opponents clashed Saturday at the Civic Center Park in Berkeley,
California, police said. Another eleven people were also injured.[398]
April 18 – Protesters came to Snap-on Inc. in Kenosha, Wisconsin to
urge Trump to release his tax returns. President Trump was there to sign
an executive order.[399]
April 19 – Anti-Trump protesters showed up at Auburn University
after "word got out that white nationalist Richard Spencer would be
speaking at an event."[400]
April 22 – March for Science – "Crowds massed in the US capital and
around the world on Earth Day to support science and evidence-based
research – a protest partly fueled by opposition to President Donald
Trump's threats of budget cuts to agencies funding scientists' work."[401]
April 29 – People's Climate Mobilization, environmental activists
planned out rallies and marches in Washington, D.C., and throughout the
United States.[402]
May 2017
May 1 – Immigration rights strike and protest were planned.[403]
The 2017 May Day protests took place across the country.[404]
May 3 - Demonstrators rallied outside the White House to protest
executive order 13798, Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty.[405]
May 4 - A protest took place in New York when Trump returned to the
city for the first time since he took office.[406] A protest took place
at the Wallace Bennett Federal Building in Salt Lake City after the
House passage of the American Health Care Act (AHCA).[407]
May 9 - Hundreds of protesters demanded that Trump stay in the
Paris Agreement, rallying outside of the Trump Hotel in Washington,
D.C.[408]
May 10 - A protest against Trump took place outside of the White
House where demonstrators called for an independent prosecutor and for
Trump's impeachment.[409] Betsy DeVos was booed and students turned
their back to her when she gave a commencement speech at Bethune-Cookman
University.[410]
May 11 - Protesters in Butte gathered to demonstrated against
Donald Trump, Jr. and Greg Gianforte.[411] Around 150 protesters in San
Diego protested against Trump and the GOP.[412]
May 13 - Around 200 protesters spelled out the word "Resist!" with
their bodies on Trump National Golf Course in Rancho Palos Verdes,
California.[413] Around a hundred protesters demonstrated in Lynchburg
against Trump's Liberty University address.[414] Protesters in South
Florida demonstrated in Little Haiti against the deportation of Haitian
refugees.[415]
May 15 - Protesters in Seattle rallied in front of the federal
courthouse in opposition to the travel ban.[416] Artist, Robin Bell,
used a video projector to place words on the Trump International Hotel
such as "pay Trump bribes here" and "emoluments welcome."[417]
May 20 - Protests took place in Yemen in opposition of Trump's
visit to Saudi Arabia. Thousands of demonstrators aligned with Houthi
rebels marched through Sana'a.[418]
May 23 - Thousands of demonstrators in Gaza supporting the Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) protested Trump's visit to
Bethlehem.[419] Protesters in Rome demonstrated against Trump's visit to
the Vatican.[420] Hundreds of students walked out on Mike Pence's
commencement speech at Notre Dame in order to protest Trump
administration policies.[421]
May 24 - Around 9,000 people in Brussels attended a rally against
Trump who called the city a "hellhole." Belgians at the protest
indicated that he was not welcome and that they were against "his war
agenda."[422][423]
May 27 - A protest took place near the location of the G-7 summit
in Giardini Naxos.[424]
June 2017
June 1 - Protesters demonstrated against Trump's pull out from the
Paris Agreement in front of the White House.[425]
June 3 - Thousands of protesters participated in the March for
Truth.[426]
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