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Guest post: "I'm marching because Trump's presidency will affect us all"

157 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 19/01/2017 13:18

This Saturday, the first day of Donald Trump's presidency, I will join the Women's March on London. I will march as a US voter who tried and failed to keep Trump out, and as the co-founder of the UK Women's Equality Party. I will march alongside thousands of party members and a wide range of other organisations and individuals. We will march in solidarity with the Women's March on Washington and at least 386 sister marches taking place across five continents.

It is already clear how women in the US will suffer as a direct consequence of Trump's election. Plans are gathering pace to defund the largest US provider of family planning services, Planned Parenthood, and to restrict abortion rights. At least 46 states are already debating anti-abortion bills. This is only the tip of the iceberg. For many women, the impact will be harder still, because of their race or sexual orientation, because they are differently abled or from a religious community or of an age or social class that is already subject to systemic discrimination.

Some people question why we should have a London March. It's true that we on this side of the Atlantic already have a lot to worry about, with the pay gap still at 19%, 77% of mothers subject to maternity discrimination at work and the UK hurtling towards Brexit without any clear focus on mitigating the repercussions for women. On average women are poorer than men, earn less if employed, are more likely to be caregivers and therefore rely more heavily on public services routinely targeted for cutbacks by governments in times of upheaval. And upheaval is coming. The female half of the population will bear the brunt.

I will march because what happens in Vegas doesn't always stay in Vegas. The US is the world's largest economy and its largest exporter of ideas. The misogyny, racism and homophobia that marked Trump's election campaign is poisoning discourse everywhere and emboldening extremists in many parts of the world. His denial of climate change will affect the very air we breathe. We cannot allow ourselves to treat Trump as if he were a normal President. To do so would be to misunderstand the nature of the beast.

The London March creates a platform to discuss local and national concerns as well as international issues - and it's pretty hard to disentangle these things anyway. Everywhere, mainstream politics is letting women down. Economies that harness the productive power of women perform far better - yet here we are at the beginning of 2017 and there still isn't a single society that is fully gender equal. The many men who will join the marches understand that Trump's war on women is part of a wider reality that hurts them too. Gender equality remains a distant dream and, increasingly, the rights and protections we do enjoy are coming under attack.

Yet another answer is that the London March and sister marches aren't primarily protests. They are affirmations of the things we hold dear. They are about creating alliances and movements. The London March came about because women in the UK heard about plans for the Washington event and independently put out calls for action in solidarity. The Women's Equality Party, contacted by some of these women, alerted them to each other's initiatives and agreed to help with logistics and organisation. As a young party - registered with the Electoral Commission in July 2015 - WE have had to learn very quickly how to do such things and we believe in sharing the benefits of that experience.

Like the Women's Marches, we are collaborative and non-partisan. WE do not believe that the struggle for gender equality belongs to one part of the political spectrum. Only by working together, by combining our voices, can we make real and lasting change.

Of course, the marches cannot halt Trump's presidency or alleviate specific injustices. What they can and will do is help to demonstrate where the vast majority of public sentiment lies. A false narrative has gained currency with Trump's victory—that this was a popular victory, when in fact he didn't even win the popular vote; that the prejudices to which he gave voice are shared by most of us.

It is important to puncture this narrative because mainstream politics is apt to accept dominant narratives and then to try to curry favour with voters rather than interrogating and challenging their presumed views. It is important to ensure the political mainstream knows that most of us don't want any part of the polarised and polarising world of Trump. We want a society in which every one of us, and our children, can flourish. Let's make our voices heard.

OP posts:
MercyMyJewels · 20/01/2017 12:12

A Triumph! HairyLittlePoet

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 12:13

I think that deserves a guest blog post all of its own tbh!

hairy might even reply when people post on it...

venusinscorpio · 20/01/2017 12:19

Standing ovation for Hairy! FlowersStar

Prawnofthepatriarchy · 20/01/2017 12:28

Hurray for Hairy! We need you to do it on youtube - become a new feminist poet.Star

HairyLittlePoet · 20/01/2017 12:56

Notbloominlikely!

Give it to Mags if she wants it :-) tho' I doubt it's her cup of tea.

NowtSalamander · 20/01/2017 14:22

hairy said it all.

I'm sad about this march thing. People keep telling me I should be up for it but instead I am Confused about what the hell it's all about: I mean when people chant "what do we want" what's the response going to be??? Someone explain.

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 14:33

"What do we want - something! When do we want it - soon!!"

EmpressOfTheSpartacusOceans · 20/01/2017 14:39

(But only if us having it doesn't offend or exclude men and transwomen, because that would be nasty.)

SaskiaRembrandtWasFramed · 20/01/2017 15:04

It's all a bit vague, it reminds me of this

m.youtube.com/watch?v=gT9xuXQjxMM

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 15:08

Stuff and things.

Guest post: "I'm marching because Trump's presidency will affect us all"
EmpressOfTheSpartacusOceans · 20/01/2017 15:17

I'd also like to know WEP's view on a Canadian 15-year-old girl having a double mastectomy and other children who think they might be trans being given Lupron as a puberty blocker. This is a link to a petition to US Congress "to warn others regarding the drug Lupron... in the hope that further long-term safety studies are done before it disables or kills more women. This drug was originally marketed to treat prostate cancer patients but now is widely used for the treatment of endometriosis, infertility, fibroids/ovarian cysts and even precocious puberty."

Does this bother WEP at all? Enough to speak out against the harmful dominant narrative? Because Mermaids, who profess to support trans / GNC children and their families, are doing the exact opposite. And these people need politicians who are brave enough to fight for them.

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 15:25
LassWiTheDelicateAir · 20/01/2017 16:05

I have far more respect for this marching band than anyone who goes on this march. These musicians , largely, teenagers are behaving like dignified grown ups.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38685680

Bifflepants · 20/01/2017 18:59

That poem was fucking brilliant.

AveEldon · 20/01/2017 20:40

HairyLittlePoet - you are awesome!

AngryPrincess · 20/01/2017 20:53

I think a good reason to march, is to show solidarity with the many minority groups that Trump has marginalised: disabled people, people of colour, LGBT, immigrants,(excepting his immediate family), muslims, soldiers suffering from PTSD....

BonjourMinou · 20/01/2017 20:56

That was AMAZING

SeekEveryEveryKnownHidingPlace · 20/01/2017 20:59

Hairy I am in awe!

OP you came on and flashed around a bit of fatuous under thought patronising drivel: are you coming back? Or did you feel like that was enough?

Prawnofthepatriarchy · 20/01/2017 21:02

I can that these are reasons for Americans to march, AngryPrincess, but what's the point of marching in London? What are we going to do? March against a different obnoxious national leader every week? Putin next weekend, etc?

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 21:14

Just gonna pick out my favourite line to bump...

Science denial from Trump’s a damn shame. But when it’s by us it is totes Not The Same

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 21:17

Prawn, personally I think a little bit of "we should get our own house in order first"! That sounds like 'charity begins at home spouted by a bigot, but I mean that when our system is so dodgy, what gives us the moral high ground over other countries?

Prawnofthepatriarchy · 20/01/2017 21:19

I can that these are reasons for Americans to march, AngryPrincess, but what's the point of marching in London? What are we going to do? March against a different obnoxious national leader every week? Putin next weekend, etc?

Prawnofthepatriarchy · 20/01/2017 21:21

Sorry, Empress, can't work out what comment of mine you're responding to.

BeyondCanSeeTheEmperorsBellend · 20/01/2017 21:26

Re marching against random world leaders. Grin I don't think we hold the moral high ground, and think it's a tad jingoistic (right word?) for us to assume that we know better than the colonies (especially considering we have some rather extreme political splits here atm!) who have democratically elected a wanker leader.

Prawnofthepatriarchy · 20/01/2017 21:32

Sorry, I wasn't recommending it. I was trying to point out to AngryPrincess that if we marched against Trump this weekend then - were that considered a worthwhile thing to do - in theory we could make a list of other leaders we don't like and march against them too. I expect we could come up with quite a few.

I was trying to make the point that American election results are not our business, but obviously not doing a very good job of it. Grin

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