Sunday, December 07, 2025 | Jumada al-akhirah 15, 1447 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Protesters express doom and hope as Republicans take power

People attend the statewide say of action and community rally in New York City. — AFP
People attend the statewide say of action and community rally in New York City. — AFP
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WASHINGTON: Thousands of people gathered in Washington to protest President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration, as activists for women's rights, racial justice and other causes rallied against incoming policies they say will threaten their constitutional rights during the Republican's second term. Some in the crowd wore the pink hats that marked the much-larger protest against Trump's first inauguration in 2017. They wound through downtown amid a light rain, past the White House and toward the Lincoln Memorial along the National Mall for the "People's March."


Protests against Trump's inauguration are smaller this time, in part because the US women's rights movement seems more fractured to many activists after Trump defeated Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris in November. Organisers predicted 50,000 would attend, while local police expected about 25,000. More than 300 other marches were planned nationwide.


Reproductive rights groups joined activists for civil rights, the environment and other causes in organising the march against Trump. He is preparing to take office, having lost his first re-election bid in 2020 to President Joe Biden, a Democrat.


"A lot of people are disillusioned," said Olivia Hoffman, 26, who works at the California-based Young Women’s Freedom Center, which supports impoverished women and youth, and travelled with her mother to march in the nation's capital. "A lot of people feel like we’ve been fighting for the same things for so long.” Saturday's march attracted a wide range of causes from immigration and democracy to climate change and the Gaza war. At least one protester called out Trump's pressure on Canada, carrying a sign that read "We are not your 51st state."


The protests were largely peaceful amid heightened security as police cars, with sirens on, drove nearby. One protester in a red MAGA hat who emerged near the front of the march was led away by authorities, and activists displayed graphic posters near the crowd's final gathering spot. With Trump's Republicans also controlling Congress and conservatives leading the US Supreme Court, it is unclear how activists or Democrats can counter Trump's plans. "I’m glad I can see some people here are hopeful," said Nancy Robinson, a 65-year-old retired printing and tech specialist from Maryland. "That’s not me. I think we’re doomed." Other protests are planned over the weekend, including on Inauguration Day, which falls on Martin Luther King Jr Day. Civil rights leaders say they will rally and continue to mobilise under Trump's administration. — Reuters


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