User:Trackinfo/sandbox7
November 8, Election day
[edit]As declaration of Trump's victory was being flashed across television sets on the West Coast, university students began to protest. 1,500 to 3,000 protesters roamed the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles, Others protested at University of California, Irvine,[1] University of Southern California, University of California and San Jose State University into the wee hours of the night.
November 9
[edit]The day following the election, tens of thousands of people were in the streets of America's major cities protesting.[2][3] CNN assessed at the time, the cities were with large Democratic bases.[4] Nine News Australia assumed them to be Clinton supporters.[5]
In New York City alone the crowd was estimated at ten thousand as police were surprised by the sudden appearance of the angry crowd. They marched 40 blocks down Fifth Avenue, closing the prominent thoroughfare en route to their destination Trump Tower, home of the new president elect.[6] Loaded Department of Sanitation dump trucks were brought in, surrounding the building for two blocks for security.[7] Celebrities such as Madonna, Cher, and Lady Gaga took part, with Gaga exhorting the crowd from the top of a sanitation truck.[8][9][10][11]
Another 10,000 protested in Boston surrounding the Boston Common before going to the Massachusetts State House and Copley Square. Among the signs at the protest were "Not My President," "No Fascist," "We Will Not Be Silenced," "No KKK," and "He Will Never Be My President."[2]
In Chicago, police traded insults with a few thousand protesters, one office wearing a Trump badge on his cap. Protesters blocked the Trump International Hotel and Tower's entrance before being corralled across the street. Police closed the Wabash Avenue Bridge to keep protesters at bay, while Lake Shore Drive was occasionally blocked by protesters.[12][13][14][15]
The San Francisco Bay Area had several protests. About 1500 students walked out of classes at Berkeley High School,[16] chanting "Si se suede" ("Yes we can) in Spanish.[17] Similar demonstrations were held in at least seven other high schools from San Rafael to San Jose.[18][19] Five blocks away, at the University of California, students gathered at the traditional protest location outside Sproul Hall.[17] Later in the evening, a third group of protesters assembled in Berkeley.[20] Separately, seven thousand protested in downtown Oakland. Windows were smashed, including at Oakland City Hall, I-580 was blocked[21] and small fires were set by protesters with several arrests.[22][23] A female protester was hit by a car on Telegraph Avenue, sustaining major injuries. The car that hit her was vandalized.[24] The protest in San Francisco, by comparison was smaller and quieter with thousands marching with police escort.[25][26] Across town, a separate protest was held at San Francisco State University.[27] At San Jose State University hundreds gathered at the Tommie Smith/John Carlos statue.[16] #Calexit became a trending hashtag on Twitter, suggesting California should secede.[19]
In Los Angeles, a reposted 18 year old's Facebook post led to 300 students walking out of Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools and marching past Staples Center to Los Angeles City Hall.[28] Later in the day, thousands more converged on downtown Los Angeles, a group of them making their way onto the 101 Freeway and blocking it for hours.[29] An effigy pinata of Trump was burned.[30]
Trump was burned in effigy in New Orleans, shown on national news channels.[4]
North High School Des Moines[31]East High School[32][33]
Protests against Donald Trump that occurred in cities on November 9, 2016 |
---|
Protests occurred in the following cities:
- Atlanta, Georgia[34][2]
- Ann Arbor, Michigan[35]
- Austin, Texas[36]
- Chicago, Illinois[2]
- Cleveland, Ohio[37]
- Dallas, Texas[38][2]
- Denver, Colorado[39][40]
- Des Moines, Iowa[41]
- Detroit, Michigan[42]
- Houston, Texas[43]
- Kansas City, Missouri[44]
- Las Vegas, Nevada[45]
- Los Angeles, California[46][2]
- Miami, Florida[47]
- Nashville, Tennessee[48]
- New Orleans, Louisiana[49]Cite error: A
<ref>
tag is missing the closing</ref>
(see the help page). - Oakland, California[26][2]
- Omaha, Nebraska[50]
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[51][2]
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania[2]
- Phoenix, Arizona[52]
- Portland, Maine[53]
- Portland, Oregon[54][2]
- Providence, Rhode Island[55]
- Reno, Nevada[56]
- Richmond, Virginia[57][2]
- San Diego, California[5]
- San Francisco, California[26]
- San Jose, California[5]
- Salt Lake City, Utah[58]
- Seattle, Washington[46][59][2]
- St. Paul, Minnesota[2]
- Syracuse, New York[60]
- Washington, D.C.[61][2]
- Winston-Salem, North Carolina[62]
Universities
[edit]Protests also occurred at various universities, including:
Protests against Donald Trump that occurred at universities on November 9, 2016 |
---|
- Arizona State University[63]
- California State University, Channel Islands[64]
- Chapman University[65]
- Fisk University[48]
- Hampshire College[66]
- Illinois State University[67]
- University of California[68]
- University of California, Davis[69]
- University of California, Los Angeles[70]
- University of California, Merced[71]
- University of California, San Diego[72]
- University of California, Santa Cruz[73]
- University of Connecticut[68][74][75]
- University of Georgia[76]
- University of Kentucky[77]
- University of Michigan[78]
- University of Pittsburgh[79]
- University of Texas[68]
- Western Kentucky University[80]
International protests also occurred in cities such as Montreal, Canada.[81]
High school and college students walked out of classes to protest.[46][64] The protests were peaceful for the most part, although at some protests fires were lit, flags were burned, people yelled rude remarks about Trump, and a Trump piñata was burned.[82][83][84] Some protesters took to blocking freeways in Los Angeles, San Diego, and Portland, Oregon, and were dispersed by police in the early hours of the morning.[85][86] One protester was hit by a car.[72] In a number of cities, protesters were dispersed with rubber bullets, pepper spray and bean-bags fired by police.[87][88][89] While protests ended at 3:00 a.m. in New York City, calls were made to continue the protests over the coming days.[90]
-
Protesters by Trump Tower Chicago on November 9, 2016
-
Protest in Oakland, California on November 9, 2016
-
Protests at the University of California, Los Angeles on November 9, 2016
-
Protesters in Austin, Texas on November 9, 2016
-
Protesters in St. Paul, Minnesota on November 9, 2016
November 10
[edit]As Trump held the first transition meeting with President Obama at the White House, protesters were outside.[91] Protests continued in cities across the United States. International protests were held in London, Vancouver, and Manila.[92][93] Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani called protesters "a bunch of spoiled cry-babies."[94] Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti expressed understanding of the protests and praised those who peacefully wanted to make their voices heard.[95]
In Austin, Texas, a young girl rallied protesters behind the mantra: "I am a female, I am mixed race, I am a child and I cannot vote. But that will not stop me from getting heard" after which chants of "Love is love, and love trumps hate" followed.[96][97][98][99] In Los Angeles, protesters continued blocking freeways.[100] A peaceful protest turned violent when a small group began rioting and attacking police in Portland, Oregon.[101] The protests in Portland attracted over 4,000 people and remained largely peaceful, but took to the highway and blocked traffic.[102] Acts of vandalism including a number of smashed windows, vandalized vehicles, and a dumpster fire caused police to declare a riot.[102][103] Protesters tried to retain the peaceful nature of the protest and chanted "peaceful protest".[104]
In Chicago, a Trump supporter named David Wilcox was harassed by a group of young African-American men who noticed the Trump bumper sticker on his car. The group eventually shoved Wilcox to the ground and repeatedly beat him, before one of them stole his car with Wilcox hanging onto the window from outside.[105][106]
Over a thousand San Francisco high school students walked out of class to protest. The size of the protest caused the Muni to reroute its busses off of Market Street and onto Mission Street.[107]
In Los Angeles thousands of protesters flocked to downtown. Early in the afternoon, several hundred made their way onto the Interstate 10 in California#San Bernardino Freeway\San Bernardino Freeway near Boyle Heights, some riding skateboards. After the California Highway Patrol cleared the freeway, another pack of several hundred blocked the Hollywood Freeway, while police cruisers had to block others from re-entering the San Bernardino Freeway near California State University, Los Angeles. Down the road, another 650 protesters met police resistance in Santa Ana. A brick was thrown at a police car.[108]
Protests were held in the following cities:
- Ann Arbor, Michigan[35]
- Atlanta, Georgia[109]
- Baltimore, Maryland[110]
- Berkeley, California[111]
- Boise, Idaho[112]
- Charlotte, North Carolina[113]
- Chicago, Illinois[114]
- Columbus, Ohio[115]
- Dallas, Texas[38]
- Denton, Texas[116]
- Denver, Colorado[117]
- Detroit, Michigan[118]
- Fargo, North Dakota[119]
- Grand Rapids, Michigan[120]
- Greensboro, North Carolina[121][122]
- Hampton, Virginia[123]
- Houston, Texas[124]
- Louisville, Kentucky[125]
- Los Angeles, California[126]
- Madison, Wisconsin[127]
- Milwaukee, Wisconsin[128]
- Minneapolis, Minnesota[129][122]
- New Orleans, Louisiana[130]
- New York City, New York[131]
- Oakland, California[126][122][122]
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[132][122]
- Pittsburg, California[114]
- Portland, Oregon[133][122]
- Richmond, Virginia[57]
- San Francisco, California[126]
- Santa Ana, California[134]
- Santa Rosa, California[135]
- Tampa, Florida[136]
- Washington, D.C.[122]
Universities 10
[edit]There were also continued protests at universities such as:
- Emory & Henry College[137]
- San Diego State University[138]
- Temple University[17]
- Texas State University[139]
- University of California[17]
- University of California, Los Angeles[140]
- University of California, Santa Barbara[141]
- University of Massachusetts[17]
- University of Minnesota[142]
- University of Southern California[140]
- University of Tennessee.[143]
- University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire[144]
Numerous petitions were started to prevent Trump from taking office; including a Change.org petition started by Elijah Berg of North Carolina requesting that faithless electors in states that Trump won vote for Clinton instead, which surpassed three million signatures.[145]
November 11
[edit]Protests occurred in the following cities:
- Anchorage, Alaska[146]
- Asheville, North Carolina[147]
- Atlanta, Georgia[148]
- Bakersfield, California[149]
- Burlington, Vermont[150]
- Charleston, West Virginia[151]
- Columbia, South Carolina[152]
- Columbus, Ohio[153]
- Dallas, Texas[154]
- Dayton, Ohio[155]
- Denver, Colorado[156]
- Des Moines, Iowa[157]
- El Paso, Texas[158]
- Eugene, Oregon[159]
- Fort Worth, Texas[160]
- Grand Rapids, Michigan[161]
- Iowa City, Iowa[162]
- Kansas City, Missouri[163]
- Los Angeles, California[164]
- Memphis, Tennessee[165]
- Miami, Florida[166]
- Minneapolis, Minnesota[167]
- Nashville, Tennessee[48]
- New Haven, Connecticut[168]
- New York, New York[131]
- Norfolk, Virginia[169]
- Olympia, Washington[170]
- Omaha, Nebraska[171]
- Orlando, Florida[168]
- Portland, Oregon[172]
- Raleigh, North Carolina[173]
- Richmond, Virginia[174]
- Rochester, New York[175]
- Royal Oak, Michigan[176]
- San Antonio, Texas[177]
- San Diego, California[178]
- Santa Cruz, California[179]
Protests also occurred at the following schools:
- Columbia University[180]
- Ohio State University[181]
- Rutgers University[182]
- State University of New York at New Paltz[183]
- Syracuse University[184]
- Texas State University[185]
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign[186]
- University of Massachusetts Amherst[187][188]
- University of Maryland, Baltimore County[189]
- University of Miami[166]
- University of North Carolina, Greensboro[190]
- University of North Carolina, Wilmington[191]
- University of Pacific[192]
- University of Rochester[193]
- Vanderbilt University[194]
- Virginia Commonwealth University[195]
- Wayne State University[196]
- Wesleyan University[197]
A protest also occurred at the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel.[198][199] The American and Mexican national soccer teams also posed together in a Unity Wall in response to Trump's election before their World Cup qualifying match in Columbus, Ohio.[200]
November 12
[edit]During a peaceful march in Oregon in the early hours of November 12, one protester was shot by an unknown assailant.[201] Police in Portland, Oregon, said that they have arrested more than twenty people after protesters refused to disperse.[202]
On the first weekend day after the election, a march of over 10,000 people in Los Angeles went from MacArthur Park and shut down the busy Wilshire Blvd corridor.[203][204] In New York City, another crowd cited by NBC News as 25,000[205] marched from Union Square to Trump Tower.[206][207][208] In Chicago, thousands of people marched through The Loop.[209]
International protests also occurred in cities such as Berlin, Germany, Melbourne and Perth, Australia and Auckland, New Zealand.[210][211][212][213]
Other marches occurred in:
- Albany, New York[214]
- Bend, Oregon[215]
- Berkeley, California[216]
- Birmingham, Alabama[217]
- Boise, Idaho[218]
- Charleston, South Carolina[219]
- Chattanooga, Tennessee[220]
- Cincinnati, Ohio[221]
- Fresno, California[222]
- Indianapolis, Indiana[223]
- Knoxville, Tennessee[224]
- Las Vegas, Nevada[225]
- Lexington, Kentucky[226]
- Long Beach, California[227]
- Manchester, New Hampshire[228]
- Melbourne, Florida[229]
- Mobile, Alabama[230]
- Olympia, Washington[231]
- Palm Springs, California[232]
- Phoenix, Arizona[233]
- Portland, Maine[234]
- Portland, Oregon[235]
- Providence, Rhode Island[236]
- Salt Lake City, Utah[237]
- San Antonio, Texas[238]
- San Luis Obispo, California[239]
- Santa Fe, New Mexico[240]
- Tempe, Arizona[235]
- Tucson, Arizona[241]
- Toledo, Ohio[221]
- Washington, D.C.[242][243]
- Worcester, Massachusetts[244]
-
Protest in Washington, D.C.
-
The anti-Trump protest in Los Angeles on November 12 attracted over 8,000 demonstrators
-
Michael Moore at a protest in New York City
-
Protest in Grand Rapids, Michigan
November 13
[edit]Protests were planned in Arizona and Maryland,[202][245] and continued in the following cities:
- Austin, Texas[246]
- Berkeley, California[247]
- Buffalo, New York[248]
- Chicago, Illinois[249]
- Colorado Springs, Colorado[250]
- Denver, Colorado[251]
- Durango, Colorado[252]
- Erie, Pennsylvania[205]
- Fort Collins, Colorado[253]
- Fort Lauderdale, Florida[205]
- Honolulu, Hawaii[254]
- Los Angeles, California[205]
- Manchester, New Hampshire[255]
- Miami, Florida[256]
- New Haven, Connecticut[205][257]
- New York City, New York[205]
- Oakland, California[205][258][259]
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[205][260]
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania[261]
- Royal Oak, Michigan[262]
- Sacramento, California[259][263]
- St. Louis, Missouri[264]
- St. Petersburg, Florida[265]
- Santa Ana, California[259]
- San Francisco, California[205][259]
- Springfield, Massachusetts[205][266]
- Tulsa, Oklahoma[260]
- Wichita, Kansas[267]
-
"Hands Across Lake Merritt" protest in Oakland, California on November 13, 2016[268]
-
Anti-Trump protesters march between Columbus Circle and Trump Tower in New York City on November 13, 2016[269]
-
Protesters march through San Francisco's Castro District on November 13, 2016[272]
-
Protesters sit in the street in San Francisco's Mission District on November 13, 2016[272]
International protests have occurred in cities including Toronto, Canada, where about a thousand people gathered in Nathan Phillips Square.[273][274]
November 14
[edit]Protests were planned in Pennsylvania.[276]
A group of 40 protesters in Washington, D.C. staged a sit-in at the office of prospective Senate minority leader Charles Schumer, in an effort to change Democratic leadership and prevent the party's collaboration with Trump. Seventeen arrests were made at that sit-in.[277]
At a small protest at Ohio State University, protest leader Timothy Adams was attacked from behind, knocking him to the steps he was standing on, breaking his bullhorn and glasses.[278][279]
Several school districts experienced walkouts from high school students, many of them too young to have voted.[280]
One said “The future is going to be terrible with Trump.”[281] Another said "We can’t vote yet, but we have to start small."[282]
Protests occurred in the following cities:
- Schools in Denver, Colorado[283]
- Schools in Los Angeles, California[284]
- Schools in Oakland, California[285]
- Schools in Portland, Oregon[286]
- Schools in Montgomery County, Maryland[284][287]
- Seattle, Washington[288] including some 5,000 students[289]
- Auburn University[290]
- Towson University[291]
- University of Arizona[292]
- University of Florida[293]
- La Salle University[294]
November 15
[edit]Student protests occurred in the following cities and universities:
- Central Michigan University[295]
- Montgomery County, Maryland[287]
- New York City[296]
- Penn State University[297]
- Rutgers University[298]
- St. Mary's College of California[299]
- Stanford University[300]
- University of California, Riverside[301]
- University of Chicago[302]
- University of Illinois at Chicago[303]
- Washington, D.C.[296][304]
Other protests occurred in:
November 16
[edit]Student protests continued for a third day in Montgomery County, Maryland.[287]
Students around the country walked out of classes in an effort to push their schools to declare themselves a "sanctuary campus" from Trump's planned immigration policy of mass deportations.[309] The Stanford, Rutgers, and St. Mary's protests on November 15 were among the first.[299] Rutgers President Robert Barchi responded that the school will protect the privacy of its undocumented immigrants.[310] California State University Chancellor Timothy P. White made a similar affirmation.[311] Iowa State University reaffirmed continuation of their already existing policy.[312]
Around 350 Harvard University faculty members signed a letter urging the administration to denounce hate speech, protect student privacy, reaffirm admissions and financial aid policies and to make the university a sanctuary. One of the first to sign the letter was Henry Louis Gates Jr.[313] Similar petitions circulated at:
- Brown University[314]
- Duke University[315]
- Oberlin College[316]
- Point Park University[317]
- Princeton University[318]
- Texas A&M University[319]
- University of Southern California[320]
- University of Wisconsin, Madison[321]
- Williams College[322]
Walkouts and protest demonstrations occurred at:
- Amherst College[323]
- The colleges of the Auraria Campus in Denver, Colorado[324]
- Columbia University[325]
- Schools in Dade County, Florida[326][327]
- East Los Angeles College[328]
- Florida International University[329]
- Indiana University[330]
- Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis[331]
- Ithaca College[332]
- Lebanon Valley College[333]
- Loyola University New Orleans[334]
- Millsaps College[335]
- Minnesota State University[336]
- Montclair State University[337]
- Mt. Holyoke College[323]
- New York University[338]
- Oberlin College[339]
- Oregon State University[340]
- Pierce College[328]
- Portland State University[341]
- Stony Brook University[342]
- SUNY ESF[343]
- Swarthmore College[344]
- Syracuse University[343]
- Towson University[345]
- Tufts University[314]
- University of California, Los Angeles[328]
- University of Colorado Boulder[346]
- University of Massachusetts Amherst[347]
- University of Michigan[348]
- University of Montana[349]
- University of Notre Dame[350]
- University of Oregon[351]
- University of Southern California[328]
- University of Texas, Arlington[352]
- Vanderbilt University[353]
- Wesleyan University[354]
- West Los Angeles College[355]
- Yale University[356][357]
- High school students walked out of classes in Homestead, Florida and Dade County schools.[358]
Off campus, protests were held in:
- Los Angeles, California[359]
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[360]
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania[361]
- San Diego, California[362]
- Tallahassee, Florida[363]
The Idaho Secretary of State reported that Idaho's four GOP electors are being aggressively lobbied to abandon Trump, with phone calls "crossing into what could reasonably be considered harassment."[364] The letters of Trump's name were also removed from three buildings in Manhattan, including Trump Place due to angered residents.[365]
November 17
[edit]- In the early morning in Los Angeles, protesters chanted "Fire Bannon" in reference to Trump appointing Steve Bannon as chief White House strategist and senior counselor on Sunday.[366][367] After the appointment, Bannon was trying to divert accusations of his being a "white nationalist."[368][369]
- In Washington, D.C., protesters stormed the GSA building lobby holding signs that read "Fire Bannon".[370]
- Two students were arrested at a protest at the University of Pittsburgh[371]
- A rally was held at the University of Miami[372]
- Around 100 students protested at Portland State University[373]
November 18
[edit]- Students from several high schools in Prince George's County, Maryland walked out of class in a coordinated protest.[374]
- About 300 protesters gathered in Cleveland's Public Square and marched through downtown Cleveland.[375][376]
- Hundreds of protesters blocked a major intersection in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.[377]
- Protesters marched to the state capitol in Sacramento, California.[378] A protest was also held at the state capitol in Augusta, Maine.[379]
- A group of protesters were outside the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington, D.C. where the white nationalist think tank National Policy Institute was meeting inside to celebrate Trump's victory. The crowd outside chanted things like "No Donald Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA!." A video crew from the NPI meeting came outside, asking a man in the crowd if he was a "self-hating white person." A scuffle ensued, the NPI photographer emerged with a gash in his forehead and was taken away in an ambulance.[380]
- Vice President-elect Mike Pence attended the musical Hamilton in New York City, where he encountered protests.[381] Actor Brandon Victor Dixon on behalf of the cast, issued this statement to Pence from the stage:
"We are the diverse America who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us, our planet, our children... but we truly hope that this show has inspired you to uphold our American values to work on behalf of all of us… all of us."[382][383]
November 19
[edit]- About 3,000 formed a hand holding ring around Green Lake in Seattle, Washington.[384]
- In Chicago, approximately 2,000 protesters marched from Federal Plaza to Trump Tower Chicago[385][386][387][388]
- Several hundred protesters rallied and marched in downtown San Francisco.[389]
- In New York City, three separate protests converged on the heavily secured area surrounding Trump Tower in New York City, where security guided them into a demonstration pen that had been erected outside of the president elect's offices and residence. One group marched from Queens.[390] One group protesting Trump's appointment of Bannon marched from Washington Square Park. A smaller but more dramatic group wearing stage special effects makeup of wounds and scars, marched from Union Square to indicate the damage a Trump administration will have on "marginalized people" including women.[391]
Additional protests occurred in:
- Charlotte, North Carolina[392]
- Cincinnati, Ohio[393]
- Gainesville, Florida[394]
- Tacoma, Washington[384]
- Wilton Manors, Florida[372]
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[395]
International protests occurred in Toronto, Canada, where at least one man was arrested;[396] Melbourne, Australia;[397] and Paris, France.[398]
November 20
[edit]- A 69-year-old man dressed in a U.S. Marine uniform set himself on fire in the Highland Square in Akron, Ohio, after ranting about the need to protest Trump's election. He was hospitalized in stable condition.[399][400]
- A protest in Brooklyn Heights attracted Adam Horovitz to Adam Yauch Park (a park named after his late-Beastie Boys bandmate), where multiple spray painted swastikas and the message “Go Trump" had been discovered two days before.[401]
We elected a president that is giving our children the message that it's OK to attack people of color. This is real. We've gotta stand up against hate . . . I reject Donald Trump's mission of America. Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens and Staten, from the Battery to the top of Manhattan. Black, white, New York, let's make it happen!"
— Adam "Ad-Rock" Horovitz[402]
- A group called "Not Up For Grabs: Portland" marched in Portland, Oregon.[403]
- Protests also occurred in Bozeman, Montana;[404] Las Vegas, Nevada;[405] Northampton, Massachusetts;[406] Oklahoma City, Oklahoma;[407] and San Rafael, California.[405]
- During a live performance on the American Music Awards of 2016, Green Day performed their new song Bang Bang. In the middle of the song, lead singer Billy Joe Armstrong included the anti-Trump chant "No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA!"[408]
- International protests continued in Melbourne, Australia.[409]
November 21
[edit]- A rally was held outside the Rhode Island State House in Providence, Rhode Island.[410]
- A protest was held in front of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio.[411]
- Protests continued outside Portland City Hall in Portland, Oregon, and a march was held later in the evening.[412]
November 22
[edit]Students at Christopher Newport University protested.[413]
November 23
[edit]A protest occurred in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The protesters called for President Obama to pardon all immigrants before the end of his term.[414]
November 25
[edit]- On Black Friday, protesters blocked entrances to stores on the Magnificent Mile in Chicago.[415]
November 26
[edit]- A small protest occurred at Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Oregon. Protester Bobby Lang said, "It's either sit in horror or go out and do things."[416]
November 27
[edit]- A protest occurred at the Nebraska State Capitol building.[417] The crowd was estimated at around 200 people.[418]
References
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- ^ http://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2016/11/not-my-president-thousands-march-in-protest/507248/
- ^ a b http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/09/politics/election-results-reaction-streets/
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- ^ http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2016/11/10/trump-tower-fifth-avenue-security/
- ^ Bitette, Nicole (November 10, 2016). "Madonna, Mark Ruffalo, T.I. and more celebrities join New York City anti-Trump protests". The New York Daily News. Retrieved November 10, 2016.
- ^ "Cher, Madonna And T.I. Lend Their Support To NYC's Anti-Trump Protests". UPROXX. November 10, 2016. Retrieved November 10, 2016.
- ^ Lang, Cady (November 10, 2016). "Lady Gaga Protested Outside Trump Tower During the Election". TIME. Retrieved November 10, 2016.
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- ^ St. Clair, Stacy; Moreno, Nereida. "Protesters block entrance to Trump Tower, stop traffic on Lake Shore Drive". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ "Thousands gather in Chicago to protest election of Trump". FOX 32 Chicago.
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- ^ http://www.marinij.com/article/NO/20161110/NEWS/161119984
- ^ a b (Richmond High School, Albany High School, San Jose Lincoln High School, Bishop O’Dowd High School, Oakland School for the Arts and Oakland International High School) http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/11/09/a-shellshocked-bay-area-reacts-to-trump-election-with-protests-tears-and-stunned-silence/
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- ^ http://abc7news.com/news/anti-trump-protesters-in-oakland-briefly-shut-down-i-580/1601565/
- ^ http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/photos/-43442802
- ^ http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Anti-Trump-protests-in-Oakland-turn-violent-10605621.php
- ^ http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Protests-Erupt-in-Bay-Area-After-Trumps-Presidential-Victory-400509211.html
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