Community Corner

Women's March LA: 750,000 Protest Trump's Presidency

Wearing pink hats, sporting colorful signs, and trolling President Donald Trump with his own words, about 750,000 marched on downtown LA.

LOS ANGELES, CA -- Thousands of people marched on Pershing Square in Los Angeles Saturday joining movements across the country denouncing the presidency of Donald Trump.

Chanting "Love, not hate, makes America great," and "We don't want your tiny hands anywhere near our underpants," people of all ages and agendas marched in the peaceful protest, which involved no arrests as of noon Saturday.

Organizers estimated that as many as 750,000 people were at the march, drastically eclipsing the expectations of 150,000 people, but the Los Angeles Police Department declined to provide crowd estimates.

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Some protesters took issue with Trump's perceived racism while other focused on his sexist comments. One woman carried a sign reading, "Nasty Granny." Other signs included: "Trump, Russian Agent," "No Trump! No KKK! No Fascist USA," "Dump Trump," "Tiny Hands," "Stop the War on Women," "I am Woman. Hear Me Roar," and "This Kitty Cat Fights Back."

In response to Trump's infamous television interview in which he said it was a mistake for a man to let his wife work outside the home, one protester carried a sign reading, "Woman's Place Is In the Revolution."

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The Los Angeles Fire Department also pegged the crowd at "over 100,000" and said 10 people were assessed by LAFD personnel for non-life- threatening illnesses or injuries, with one person taken to a hospital.

The organizers stressed that the event was non-partisan and not a protest, but a "celebration of human rights."

The mission statement for the march read, in part, "We stand together in solidarity for the protection of our rights, our safety, our health and our families -- recognizing that our vibrant and diverse communities are the strength of our country."

That spirit was borne out by peaceful crowds singing "This Land Is Our Land" and a general air of exuberance despite the pedestrian gridlock downtown.

Individuals and groups backing a wide variety of priorities were on hand, advocating for issues ranging from women's rights to environmental protections, access to healthcare, criminal justice reform, voting rights and immigrant and LGBTQ rights.

"Women's rights are human rights," read many signs.

A 6-year-old being pushed in a stroller by her dad carried a poster board bedazzled with peace signs and glitter reading, "The power of a girl is to change the world."

Her father was one of many men joining the march, including at least one wearing a pink "pussy hat," and one of many marchers who brought their children and grandchildren to the rally.

The Washington, D.C., march that sparked local "sister" marches like the one in Los Angeles was deliberately planned for the day after President Trump's inauguration. And many of the individuals and groups taking part opposed Trump and the policies he laid out on the campaign trail and during his transition to office.

"In a time when we are all wondering what we can do, we can do this ... let them hear our voice!" march organizer Deena Katz said in a statement.

Others were more outspoken about their distaste for the new president, with some briefly taking up a chant of "You're fired" during the march and others bearing signs with messages like, "Not my president" and "Can't build a wall. Hands too small."

One woman wore a T-shirt reading,"Pussy grabs back," and another carried a picture of the late Carrie Fisher as Princess Leia with the slogan "We are the resistance."

About five dozen celebrities, including Barbra Streisand, Jane Fonda, Natalie Portman, Kerry Washington, Alfre Woodard, Ariana Grande, Demi Lovato, Jamie Lee Curtis and Laverne Cox signed up to attend the local event.

Public officials were also out in force, with many agreeing to speak before or after the approximately one-mile march from Pershing Square to City Hall, including Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, City Councilmen Paul Koretz and Mike Bonin and former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

They served to underline the fact that this was far from a women-only event.

Five young black men studying to become doctors at USC Keck School of Medicine marched in their white lab coats. One of the men spoke for the group saying they were there "to protest hate."

Residents of all ages joined in. One 74-year-old woman said she was marching for the first time in her life.

"This stirred me," Linda Fenneman said.

Fenneman was joined by Linda Lopez, who said she had protested on behalf of migrant farm workers in 1971 in Calexico and for the civil rights of Native Americans at Wounded Knee in 1973.

"I've been protesting for 45, almost 50 years," Lopez said.

Sen. Holly Mitchell, D-Los Angeles, who was among the speakers on a stage across the street from City Hall, made a plea to protect access to health care.

"I know everything isn't perfect," Mitchell said of the Affordable Care Act. "I don't know about you, but I'm not going backwards ... We cannot allow the federal government to replace Obamacare with trumped up care."

Mitchell was among those who sought to engage the crowd to organize beyond the day of the march.

One woman from a contingent representing the League of Women Voters said they were downtown to educate residents and motivate them to vote for the policies they support.

"Democracy is not a spectator sport," she said.

Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson told participants that "California is the state that invents the future" and then aimed her remarks directly at Trump, saying, "Two out of every three Californians didn't vote for you because we know that we stand for what is better and what is good and what is just and what is right in this country."

Metro officials added service and beefed up security to accommodate the anticipated crowd, though Westside and San Fernando Valley station platforms were jam-packed with would-be riders as full trains stopped, unable to take on more people.

At the rally downtown, crowds were so dense that hundreds of people turned back on Olive Street, unable to reach Pershing Square. A few intrepid souls even scaled a fence at the end of an alley to escape the gridlock.

The half-block fenced field where the stage stood was at least half empty at midday as people packed into Grand Park and the grounds around City Hall and the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration.

Hundreds waited patiently in single-file lines for portable toilets as the afternoon wore on, while others searched out food trucks and local restaurants.

The diversity of concerns raised by those at the rally was highlighted by the fact that at least one group has scheduled its own alternate ending to the day.

AF3IRM and the National Day Laborer Organizing Network was set to leave the main march at noon and lead a "Chant Down the Walls" action at the Metropolitan Detention Center.

Another sign of diversity? A plane circled over the downtown area towing a banner that read, "Congratulations President Trump."

At about 3 p.m. the crowd had thinned out considerably and police were in the process of re-opening downtown streets to traffic.

ELIZABETH MARCELLINO of City News Service and Patch staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report; Photos by Margarita Campos, Jennifer Cook and Paige Austin

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