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NYT Thousands of people across the country marched, shut down highways, burned effigies and shouted angry slogans on Wednesday night to protest the election of Donald J. Trump as president.

The demonstrations, fueled by social media, continued into the early hours of Thursday. The crowds swelled as the night went on but remained mostly peaceful.

Protests were reported in cities as diverse as Dallas and Oakland and included marches in Boston; Chicago; Portland, Ore.; Seattle and Washington and at college campuses in California, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania.

In Oakland alone, the Police Department said, the crowd grew from about 3,000 people at 7 p.m. to 6,000 an hour later. The situation grew tense late Wednesday, with SFGate.com reporting that a group of protesters had started small fires in the street and broken windows. Police officers in riot gear were called in, and at least one officer was injured, according to other local news reports.

Slide Show

SLIDE SHOW

The Anti-Trump Protests That Erupted After the Election

CreditMatthew Hinton/The Advocate, via Associated Press.

It was the second night of protests there, following unruly demonstrations that led to property damage and left at least one person injured shortly after Mr. Trump’s election was announced.

The protests on Wednesday came just hours after Hillary Clinton, in her concession speech, asked supporters to give Mr. Trump a “chance to lead.”

One of the biggest demonstrations was in Los Angeles, where protesters burned a Trump effigy at City Hall and shut down a section of Highway 101. Law enforcement officials were called out to disperse the hundreds of people who swarmed across the multilane freeway.

In New York, crowds converged at Trump Tower, on Fifth Avenue at 56th Street in Midtown Manhattan, where the president-elect lives.

They chanted “Not our president” and “New York hates Trump” and carried signs that said, among other things, “Dump Trump.” Restaurant workers in their uniforms briefly left their posts to cheer on the demonstrators.

The demonstrations forced streets to be closed, snarled traffic and drew a large police presence. They started in separate waves from Union Square and Columbus Circle and snaked their way through Midtown.

Loaded dump trucks lined Fifth Avenue for two blocks outside Trump Tower as a form of protection.

Emanuel Perez, 25, of the Bronx, who works at a restaurant in Manhattan and grew up in Guerrero, Mexico, was among the many Latinos in the crowd.

“I came here because people came out to protest the racism that he’s promoting,” he said in Spanish, referring to Mr. Trump. “I’m not scared for myself personally. What I’m worried about is how many children are going to be separated from their families. It will not be just one. It will be thousands of families.”

Protesters with umbrellas beat a piñata of Mr. Trump, which quickly lost a leg, outside the building.

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The Police Department said on Wednesday night that 15 protesters had been arrested.

Bianca Rivera, 25, of East Harlem, described Mr. Trump’s election as something that was “not supposed to happen.”

“We’re living in a country that’s supposed to be united, a melting pot,” she said. “It’s exposing all these underground racists and sexists.”

Elsewhere in the country, college students gathered in spontaneous marches and asked university leaders to schedule meetings to reflect on the results.

After Mr. Trump’s victory speech, more than 2,000 students at the University of California, Los Angeles, marched through the streets of the campus’s Westwood neighborhood.

There were similar protests at the University of Southern California, in Los Angeles; University of California campuses in Berkeley, San Diego and Santa Barbara; Temple University, in Philadelphia; and the University of Massachusetts.

Large crowd of anti-Trump protesters outside of Trump Tower in NYC!

High school students also walked out of classes in protest in several cities.

As U.C.L.A. students made their way to classes on Wednesday, they talked about how to make sense of an outcome that had seemed impossible a day earlier.

“I’m more than a little nervous about the future,” said Blanca Torres, a sophomore anthropology major. “We all want to have conversations with each other, to figure out how to move forward. There’s a whole new reality out there for us now.”

Chuy Fernandez, a fifth-year economics student, said he was eager to air his unease with his peers.

“I’m feeling sad with this huge sense of uncertainty,” Mr. Fernandez said. The son of a Mexican immigrant, he said it was difficult not to take the outcome personally.

“We’re all just kind of waiting for a ticking time bomb, like looking around and thinking who will be deported,” he said. “That’s the exact opposite of what most of us thought would happen.”

On Facebook, a page titled “Not My President” called for protesters to gather on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, in the nation’s capital.

“We refuse to recognize Donald Trump as the president of the United States, and refuse to take orders from a government that puts bigots into power,” the organizers wrote.

“We have to make it clear to the public that we did not choose this man for office and that we won’t stand for his ideologies.”

 

2 thoughts on “‘Not Our President’: Protests Spread After Donald Trump’s Election”
  1. i wasn’t going to say anything about this, because i wrongfully gave them the benefit of the doubt, and thought that they’d stop on their own by yesterday; apparently something that they’re humanly incapable of doing, sadly. because basically and obv this is much ado about nothing; lit&fig. the ‘protests’ are abs meaningless, and int make look the us as a 2nd rate 3rd world nation. normal ppl just don’t go around punching folks, blocking roads, burning stuff, and destroying things along their ‘tantrum walks’; do they… and that’s obv because they’re emotional, angry, hateful, violent, selfcentered, propaid staffers, low level thugs, party poopers, sore losers, and wannabe great 60s sucial justice warriors1 their ‘protests’ are nothing more than tone down riots. a bunch of cry babies that can’t get over the fact that they can’t force their candidate to win anyway they can, nor ppl to vote or go their way for any matter, and that they’re wrong in every other ideological aspect, everyway you look at it. because there’s no way to justify or spin this travesty of ‘freedom and democracy’. because it’s only so, if and only if, it goes their own way, obv. yet their lack of empathy is flabbergasting, but expected. after all, they think that the world solely revolves around them, and only they are infallible correct; at least morally, even though is obv the other way around. think about nmp = blm 2.0, in steriods11 they didn’t even allowed anytime for dt’s followers to properly celebrate their deserved victory :shake-head: so how about waiting for dt to actually hold office, or better yet, to in fact do something as prez… this silly shít doesn’t make anysense to me anyhow; but maybe it’s just me… must be a stupid leftard thing, obv. however, i must admit that they do have half a point in the popular vote ‘win’; but that can be easily counter in the fact that losing was their fault, and their strategy was flawed from the start. also billary was put in that position willingly. they all accepted to play by the rules established in the const. and furthermore, the reverse has also happened to repz in the past, but you don’t see them making a big fuss about it; again, i wonder why..:roll-eyes: so if you don’t like it just simply gtfo the country, or secess your fcking state altogether111 it stops being the great ramerica the moment you start questioning the result of the election; dir or indirectly; without evidential base1111 you obv don’t have to like the result, privately; but pub, you do have to accept it, period. and in fact, these ppl making a ruckus should be the first ones to be deported anyhow11111 so you’re just not going to guilt trip us anymore into ‘it’s your fault’, or the ‘be understanding’ to minorities card. nobody believes those lies anymore; we no longer have to. so be warned, it’s yourselves the ones creating the conflict; don’t msmcry when we rightly put you in your place… fcking clintonoidz111111 &finally and btw, dt shouldn’t have to use his ‘shitter’ account to respond to anything ‘presidential’ or ‘conciliatory’ now that he’s prez. i assume he will from time to time like in campaign; because the potus one hasn’t been given to him too, has it…
    &ps; i forgot these ‘what does it matter’ now links, that make a nice validic complement to my prev remz…
    https://patriotpost.us/articles/45462
    http://www.inquisitr.com/3569591/journalist-hitchens-warned-us-about-the-clintons-and-their-clintonoids/

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