Giant crowds are expected at rallies around the United States Saturday for a second Women’s March opposing President Donald J. Trump, and calling for voter mobilization ahead of the 2018 midterm elections.
On January 21, 2017, one day after Mr. Trump’s inauguration, more than three million people marched nationwide opposing the president, according to a Washington Post estimate. The flagship rally was held in Washington, echoed in sister protests around the world.
Join us January 21st in Las Vegas for the official Women’s March anniversary event kicking off our year-long #PowerToThePolls campaign to win in 2018! Get info, register, donate, or find a sister event near you: https://t.co/yekbsBO95T pic.twitter.com/9ODxmdwXiR
— Women's March (@womensmarch) January 13, 2018
The giant outpouring illustrated the depth of resistance to the Republican billionaire president, whose hardline policies have impacted the rights of women, immigrants and minorities. But the demonstrations were also criticized for being too white and liberal.
This year the spotlight will be in Las Vegas, Nevada, a state which in 2016 voted for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton over Mr. Trump and elected the country’s first Latina senator, Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto.
More than 300 towns and cities are organizing anniversary marches and rallies, not all of them affiliated to each other. In New York, 82,000 people have registered as “interested” in attending on the event’s Facebook page.
The strapline for Las Vegas is “Power to the Polls,” designed to drive national voter registration and maximize women’s involvement in the 2018 midterm elections, in which a record number of women are standing for election.
Protesters are expected to denounce Mr. Trump’s hardline immigration policies, promote women’s rights, address the gender pay gap, concerns about health care and call for the removal of barriers to voting by marginalized communities.
“In 2018, we must turn our work into action ahead of the midterms. This new initiative will address voter registration and voter suppression head on,” says Tamika Mallory, co-president of Women’s March.
This Sunday marks one year since the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. Let us know where you'll be for the Women's March anniversary weekend! #1YearSinceWomensMarch #PowerToThePolls #TogetherWeRise pic.twitter.com/iRdqptsCVc
— Women's March (@womensmarch) January 18, 2018
Las Vegas, which in October was the scene of the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, has been rocked by sexual assault allegations against elected officials and is considered a battleground state that will shape the U.S. Senate in 2018.
“As a swing-state that will shape the Senate in 2018 and as home to a strong activist network, Nevada is the perfect place to commemorate the Women’s March and continue building our electoral power,” wrote organizers on the event’s Facebook page.
Last year, a sea of demonstrators brought downtown Washington to a standstill, in a parade of knitted, pink “pussy hats,” an allusion to Mr. Trump’s videotaped boasts of being able to grope women with impunity. Pop diva Madonna also delivered an expletive-laden indictment of the president.