Millions of people both in the United States and worldwide participated in the Womens March on Saturday, January 21.
We stand together in solidarity with our partners and children for the protection of our rights, our safety, our health, and our families the Womens March mission statement said.
This protest was the largest in U.S. history, according to politicususa.com, and over 6 hundred cities participated. University of Connecticut professor Jeremy Pressman and University of Dayton professor Erica Chenoweth are recording the total participants that marched in each city that participated.
Here are the top 15 cities with the most participants:
1. Los Angeles, CA
750,000
2. Washington, DC
680,000
3. New York, NY
500,000
4. Chicago, IL
250,000
5. Denver, CO
200,000
6. Boston, MA
175,000
7. Seattle, WA
175,000
8. San Francisco, CA
150,000
9. Madison, WI
100,000
10. Oakland, CA
100,000
11. Portland, OR
100,000
12. Minneapolis/ St. Paul, MN
100,000
13. London, United Kingdom
100,000
14. Atlanta, GA
63,000
15. Toronto, Canada
60,000
These numbers are being updated as new numbers come in. (If you want to report your city, you can do that here.)
Even with one united purpose, each participant was invited to have their own reason for marching, which they voiced to the world using #whyImarch. See some of these reasons below:
https://twitter.com/tessanetting/status/823058437483302912
https://twitter.com/womensmarch/status/822898815715995649/photo/1
https://twitter.com/LoveMeLuLu22/status/821530966636298241
https://twitter.com/julieplec/status/822873122542067715
https://www.instagram.com/p/BPnVdqDhF6S/?tagged=womensmarch&hl=en
The day following the marches, President Donald Trump tweeted, Peaceful protests are a hallmark of our democracy. Even if I don't always agree, I recognize the rights of people to express their views.
The protest is over, but the Womens March isnt over yet. They started a new campaign, 10 actions for the first 100 days, and the first action is to write a postcard to your senator explaining what is important to you, and how you will continue to fight for those rights.
We stand together in solidarity with our partners and children for the protection of our rights, our safety, our health, and our families the Womens March mission statement said.
This protest was the largest in U.S. history, according to politicususa.com, and over 6 hundred cities participated. University of Connecticut professor Jeremy Pressman and University of Dayton professor Erica Chenoweth are recording the total participants that marched in each city that participated.
Here are the top 15 cities with the most participants:
1. Los Angeles, CA
750,000
2. Washington, DC
680,000
3. New York, NY
500,000
4. Chicago, IL
250,000
5. Denver, CO
200,000
6. Boston, MA
175,000
7. Seattle, WA
175,000
8. San Francisco, CA
150,000
9. Madison, WI
100,000
10. Oakland, CA
100,000
11. Portland, OR
100,000
12. Minneapolis/ St. Paul, MN
100,000
13. London, United Kingdom
100,000
14. Atlanta, GA
63,000
15. Toronto, Canada
60,000
These numbers are being updated as new numbers come in. (If you want to report your city, you can do that here.)
Even with one united purpose, each participant was invited to have their own reason for marching, which they voiced to the world using #whyImarch. See some of these reasons below:
https://twitter.com/tessanetting/status/823058437483302912
https://twitter.com/womensmarch/status/822898815715995649/photo/1
https://twitter.com/LoveMeLuLu22/status/821530966636298241
https://twitter.com/julieplec/status/822873122542067715
https://www.instagram.com/p/BPnVdqDhF6S/?tagged=womensmarch&hl=en
The day following the marches, President Donald Trump tweeted, Peaceful protests are a hallmark of our democracy. Even if I don't always agree, I recognize the rights of people to express their views.
The protest is over, but the Womens March isnt over yet. They started a new campaign, 10 actions for the first 100 days, and the first action is to write a postcard to your senator explaining what is important to you, and how you will continue to fight for those rights.