Translating
Power into Policy: NYC Women’s March, Round 3
by John Pietaro
Photos by John Pietaro
For the third consecutive year, Manhattan’s Upper West
Side was the staging ground of the resistance. Though beset with recent division
and a competing march downtown, this mass gathering of progressive women and
like-minded male supporters spoke out thousands strong.
At 10AM, the West 72nd Street entrance to
Central Park was already vibrating as throngs emerged, many in ‘pussy hats” and
with placards held aloft. As the activists milled about, members of Batala’ NY,
a large, all-female drum ensemble, were warming up, their thunderous accents tearing
through the expanse. Speakers from Refuse Fascism brandished bullhorns, shredding
conservative talking points with humor and rhythm as a legion of Voter
Registration volunteers armed with clipboards stood at each corner. Members of Planned
Parenthood, the NYS Public Employees Federation, film and theatre union IATSE
and many other women’s and progressive organizations were out in numbers.
The storm casing the East Coast must have been
sympathetic to the cause as it’s promised snowfall, hard rain and pelting hail
were replaced by a still, cold winter day. The atmosphere made for a special urgency
extending throughout the terrain.
Over the next hour, marchers made their way toward the
61st Street rally podium, bearing signs reading “Follow the Females”,
“The Future is Intersectional”, “Halfway There”, “These Boots are Made for
Governing” and “My Body, My Choice” as well as the singular “Respect Existence
or Expect Resistance”, “Does This Ass Make My Country Look Small?”, “We Shall
Over Comb” and “Vaginal Walls, Not Border Walls”, threading satire through utterly
revolutionary statements.
Kicking off the march was an open-air rally hosted by comic
Lauren Ash. “Thank you for making history with us”, Ash told the enthusiastic
crowd. “We’ve made major cracks in the glass ceiling, but men and women are
still not seen as equal under the Constitution”.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez |
Following a Shinnecock Nation blessing by Native
activists, Women’s March Alliance founder Catherine Siemionko told the
ralliers, “We’ve gone from suffrage to Senate—and that’s just the beginning!”.
Also on stage was trans-gender advocate Hannah Simpson, her presence a
demonstration of the unifying mission at hand. “My path to womanhood was
different”, she stated, “but we stand together”. She added “We speak for the
women who suffer in silence or have been silenced”.
The celebrity of the event was Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez whose presence drew cheers quaking the press box. She told
the mass crowd that she’d been present each year of the Women’s Marches, the
first in Washington DC: “When I looked over at the Capitol Building, a shiver
went down my spine. I didn’t yet know that I was going to run for office, but a
few months later, my campaign began”.
Ocasio-Cortez continued: “We just overturned the
House, now we must do it with all of the houses, including the White House”.
Before encouraging the crowd to “march like Fannie Lou Hamer”, the
Congressional Rep added “This year we must translate power into policy!”
The march ignited the path to Columbus Circle, a
favorite target along the way the Trump Hotel. Chants of “Shame!” were
accompanied by shows of vividly anti-Trump placards, costumes and flashes of
the middle finger toward the building’s golden facade.
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