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50501 (short for "50 protests, 50 states, one day") is a grassroots effort to protest the policies and actions of the second Donald Trump administration in the United States. [1] [2] The group organized a nationwide demonstration on February 5, 2025. [3] [4] Thousands of people participated by gathering outside state capitol buildings and city ...
Miller was the director at a previous professional protest company, DC Action Lab, that the Women’s March and others hired to mount protests during the first Trump administration.
The protest was part of a nationwide series of demonstrations for immigrants' rights in response to recent ICE raids initiated by immigration-related orders by Donald Trump. Protestors waved American, Mexican, Salvadoran, Colombian, Puerto Rican, Honduran, and other flags in the air as they marched from the bridges over Highway 59 also known as ...
[16] [19] Middleton said that the 2025 People's March would "look like the 2017 version" and that many activists were "entering the new Trump era with feelings of exhaustion" and even "despair." [20] She explained that the reaction to Trump's second win "feels different" from 2017. [21] She also stated that the People's March was a group effort ...
People protest outside the USAID building, after billionaire Elon Musk, who is heading U.S. President Donald Trump's drive to shrink the federal government, said work is underway to shut down the ...
“All the people that would be protesting Trump, a lot of these people, a lot of that energy are now focused on protesting a genocide in Gaza," said Thomas Kennedy, an immigrant from Argentina ...
People march around the perimeter of Washington Park during a protest against president-elect Donald Trump's inauguration, Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025, at Washington Park in Over-the-Rhine.
For instance, there was a notable spike in usage throughout the week of Trump's response to the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. [9] Moreover, in the three days following the announcement of the initial Muslim ban in late January, #Resist appeared in over 2.5 million tweets. [ 10 ]