Hundreds
of thousands of people converged on downtown Los Angeles on Saturday to
march for women’s rights in one of a series of demonstrations taking
place across the country. Participants began gathering at Pershing …
Massive women's march in downtown L.A. said to be largest in over a decade
Cindy Chang, Ruben Vives, Dakota Smith, Richard Winton, Christine Zhang
Hundreds of thousands of people converged on downtown
Los Angeles on Saturday to march for women’s rights in one of a series
of demonstrations taking place across the country.
Participants
began gathering at Pershing Square as early as 8 a.m., and by
9:30 protesters had overwhelmed the square and filled surrounding
streets. Metro trains into downtown L.A. were jammed with people headed
to the march.
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The exact size of the protest was difficult to measure. Women’s march organizers put the number at 750,000.
The Los Angeles Police Department
said in a statement that “well past” 100,000 people attended but did
not provide a more precise number. One law enforcement source said
officials found it difficult to measure the size because the
demonstrators ended up marching down multiple streets.
Officials said it appeared to be the largest
since a massive 2006 immigration march downtown. The LAPD estimated that
march drew 500,000, but organizers insisted the number was higher.
Veteran
activist Jorge Rodriguez, 64, who helped organize the 2006
demonstration, said he thought Saturday’s march appeared to be as large
as the immigration event if not bigger.
Regardless, police said no arrests had been made and that officers were reopening streets as the crowds began to thin out. Follow our live coverage of the women's marches around the country »
The
crowd was too large to be accommodated by the planned Hill Street march
route. Demonstrators jammed the surrounding streets of Olive, Broadway
and Grand Avenue, chanting "Love Trumps hate" as they made their way
toward City Hall.
“There is a sea of humanity everywhere,” said Los Angeles police Capt. Andrew Neiman. Aerial footage of the march
taken near Grand Park showed an astounding scene, with streets clogged
with demonstrators as far as the eye could see, spilling out across the
Civic Center.
The immense crowd was punctuated by
bright pink splashes from hats, scarves, jackets and signs in the
traditionally feminine color that has now become a symbol of defiance.
Some reported that being in a large crowd of like-minded people was an antidote to the depression they felt on Friday when Donald Trump was inaugurated as president. The march has helped them transform despair into action, they said.
“It’s
going to be a revival of the ’60s, and I’m going to be a part of it,”
said Anna Vastano, 57, a retired social worker. “I’m not going to sit
back and in 20 years have my grandchildren say, why didn’t I do
something.”
Vastano’s daughter, Alexandra, said this was
her first time at a political protest. The experience, she said, has
inspired her to donate money to Planned Parenthood in the name of Vice
President Mike Pence, who opposes abortion rights.
Alexandra
Vastano, 25, who works in health insurance and has a master’s degree in
public health, was already thinking about going to law school. Now, she
said, studying for the entrance exam has become a high priority because
of her determination to fight Trump’s agenda.
A group of
five friends, most in their early 30s, said they had never joined a
protest until Saturday. They said that for them, the march will be the
first step toward taking action instead of just expressing themselves on
Facebook.
Sarah Onheiber, 33, an animator, said that as a
working mother she doesn’t have much time to volunteer, but she now
plans to donate money to causes she believes in. She is inspired by her
daughter, who is almost 3.
“I can’t imagine her not having the same rights I have,” she said.
Despite
the size of the crowd, officials said the event was proceeding in an
orderly fashion and that no major problems were reported.
The march began at 10 a.m. under sunny skies and was scheduled to wrap up by 4 p.m.
Organizers have emphasized that the march is not simply a protest against the new Trump administration.
“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,” the organizers
said in their mission statement. “In the spirit of democracy and
honoring the champions of human rights, dignity, and justice who have
come before us, we join in diversity to show our presence in numbers too
great to ignore. We stand together, recognizing that defending the most
marginalized among us is defending all of us.”
Organizers
released a long list of Hollywood heavyweights scheduled to attend,
including Natalie Portman, Kerry Washington and Barbra Streisand.
The march was led by an all-female motorcycle group called the East Side Moto Babes.
The engines of the bikes roared along with the cheering crowd. At the head of the march was singer Miley Cyrus.
The crowd chanted, "This is what democracy looks like” and “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Donald Trump got to go.”
After
Metro reported early Saturday that several of its subway and commuter
rail stations — including those in Orange County — were jammed and, in
some cases, overwhelmed with passengers trying to get to the downtown
L.A. march, the transportation authority announced it was adding trains
on some of its lines. Many were crowded to capacity, as were stations
along the Expo, Blue, Red and Gold lines. Some inner-city bus lines also
were packed.
Erica Zeitlin said she caught the Expo Line
in Santa Monica, but it took nearly an hour before there was a train
available with enough space to accommodate more passengers.
“Metro could have put on 10 times as many trains, and they’d be busy,” she said. “The platforms are packed.”
The
rail lines were so packed that some Culver City passengers said they
had to travel west to Santa Monica before they were able to board a
downtown-bound train.
Expo Line passenger Angela Duffy
said the Culver City station was so packed that she decided to walk to
the Palms station. But that station also was crowded, so her group
headed to the Santa Monica station.
“It is worth doing it to stand with my fellow women in
solidarity,” Duffy said. “Change needs to happen. … If I just sat at
home because I didn’t want to get into the crowds, I would not be
standing up for what I believe in.”
Brenda Tullo stayed
up late crocheting one of the hats for her daughter, Allison, then rose
before the sun came up to drive to downtown L.A. from San Bernardino.
“I’m doing this for the women who came before me, who gave
me the privilege to do everything I do today,” said Allison Tullo, 24,
who works at a coffee shop. Her aunt and grandmother went to a different
women’s march in Ventura.
Trump has insulted just about everyone who isn’t a white man, she added.
Brenda Tullo, 56, a food and beverage manager, expressed outrage at Trump’s attitude about grabbing women’s private parts.
“I
am a nasty woman,” she said, referencing an insult Trump directed at
his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, during a presidential debate.
Her pink sign read: “Nasty women unite.”
Many of the
handmade signs carried by protesters referenced women’s rights,
including abortion rights. Some were directed at Trump.
“Trump, putting the bully into the pulpit,” read one sign. “Keep your tiny hands off our rights,” read another.
Others
sought to turn the conversation in a positive direction: “Tweet Love,
Tweet Peace,” read the sign carried by Andrea Testa, 52, a real estate
agent from Long Beach.
“Tweet some hope is all I want, dude,” she said.
Sisters
Yolanda Ramirez, 65, and Jo Ann Ramirez, 66, were part of a group that
traveled from Downey and Santa Ana to attend Saturday’s rally. “This is
my first rally,” said Yolanda, who held a sign reading, “Pres. Trump,
Please Lead Do Not Bully.”
The sisters said they decided
to attend the rally days after the Nov. 8 election, and took the Metro
line early Saturday to the event. They are marching to represent women
“who have no voice,” Jo Ann said.
“It’s for the disenfranchised,” she said of the L.A. rally.
Gabriela
Macias, 41, of Venice, stood holding a pink neon sign that laid out her
four-year plan on dealing with President Trump and his administration:
“1. Wake up. 2. Coffee. 3. Resist 4. Resist 5. Resist 6. Repeat”
“Hopefully not forever,” Macias said with a chuckle.
Macias
came out to the women’s march to stand in solidarity with the various
groups that are fighting for different causes, including immigration
rights.
“It’s very inspiring to see the turnout,” she said. “It’s good to see everybody together.”
Macias
had come to the march with her 12-year-old daughter, Abril Lopez. She
said she taken her daughter to the massive immigration rally in 2006.
“She was in a stroller,” she said.
Macias said she wants her daughter to feel comfortable about demonstrating for a cause.
“The next generation has to be comfortable to stand up and make demands,” she said.
Victoria
Bernal, who is in her 40s, said she drove from La Puente at 7:15 a.m.
and arrived at the parking lot on Olvera Street, which she said was
filling up.
She said the attendant told her most of the
spaces were being taken up by people coming to the march. Bernal walked
along Broadway holding a sign that read, “We should learn from history
not repeat it.”
“I’ve never been so scared for the
country,” she said. “Don’t set back immigration rights; don’t set back
women’s rights and gay rights.”
Bernal said she has been
to other demonstrations and decided to attend Saturday’s march to
support human rights and the groups that are standing up against
Trump’s rhetoric.
She said that though she is worried
about what kind of changes will take place under the Trump
administration, she feels optimistic.
“It makes me feel better to know there are people who are just as upset as I am, and that gives me hope.”
Dean Hezen, 26, of Canada, was in town for work and decided he would buy a pair of heels and join in the march.
“It’s women's rights! How could I not march for that,” he said.
As he marched, he held a sign that read, “Walk a mile in her shoes.”
“Power to you for walking in heels,” one woman told him.
“Power to you for wearing them,” he responded to her.
“I don’t know how women do it,” he said. “But if they can walk in them every day, then I can walk in them for a little bit.”
Many teens and children were spotted in the crowd gathered at Pershing Square.
The
throngs included the Miller family from North Hollywood. Wearing a New
York Yankees hat, Andy Miller, 55, took the Metro line with his two
daughters. The crowded trip on the subway, he said, felt like a New York
experience.
Savannah Miller, 14, and Jessie Miller, 12, said they regularly read news sites like BuzzFeed and listen to the radio.
Savannah said she was marching because she wants the world to be “safer for girls.”
“Donald Trump has to make sure to be careful,” she said. “A lot of people aren’t happy.
“I want more women in the House and Senate,” she added.
The large crowd, Jessie said, shows what women can do when they work together.
There were no arrests made during the march, said LAPD Capt. Andy Neiman.
Erik
Scott, a Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman, said 10 patients were
assessed for non-life-threatening illnesses and injuries. He said only
one person required transport to a hospital. ALSO Women's marches underway across the country Watch live: Women's March on Washington Lopez: Beware the politician with simple answers. Trump still divides, and there's a lot at stake For cable networks, it's business as usual, despite unprecedented nature of Trump's inauguration
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