Trump, Good Trouble and protest
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Across the country, protesters rallied on Thursday under a shared refrain inspired by former congressman and civil rights icon John Lewis: “Good trouble lives on.” Thousands of people took to the streets in what organizers cast as a national day of action — a sweeping protest of the Trump administration’s cuts to safety net programs and efforts to roll back protections for immigrants and marginalized communities.
A large crowd rallied Thursday night to honor the late congressman and civil rights leader John Lewis by making “good trouble” and protesting President Donald Trump and the
If you're planning to attend or avoid the God Trouble protests in Philadelphia, you'll need to know where they are first.
As Americans gather in parks, on courthouse steps, and in public squares this Thursday, the ‘Good Trouble Lives On movement seeks to reignite a national conversation about the policies issued by the Trump administration.
Here are some evening Good Trouble protests in New Jersey: Vineland - 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the intersection of West Sherman Avenue and College Drive. Lambertville - 6 to 8 p.m. at 180 North Main St. Washington Township - 5 to 6:30 p.m. at the intersection of Egg Harbor Road and Greentree Road. Camden - 6 to 9 p.m. at 801 Delaware Ave.
If you plan on attending – or avoiding – the Good Trouble protests in Philadelphia on July 17, you'll need to know where they are, and if you'll be able to safely navigate to the protests or get around them.
Anti-Trump protestors are aiming to stir up some "Good Trouble" — the name given to planned protests against President Donald Trump’s administration — on Thursday, July 17, the fifth anniversary of the death of civil rights champion and Congressman John Lewis.
In the past few years, lawmakers in eight states and in the U.S. Congress have introduced more than a dozen bills that would ban the use of face coverings at protests, according to the International Center for Not-For-Profit Law.