Crowds swamp Washington for anti-Trump women's march
Inauguration met with a tidal wave of protest, with hundreds of thousands flooding Washington DC and huge crowds in other cities across the United States.
Josephine Tovey is a New York-based reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.
Inauguration met with a tidal wave of protest, with hundreds of thousands flooding Washington DC and huge crowds in other cities across the United States.
One of the most prominent American white nationalists was punched in the face during an interview with the ABC on the streets of Washington DC shortly after Donald Trump's inauguration on Friday.
The bitter divisions that Donald Trump has exposed in the United States were evident on every street corner of Washington DC on Friday.
Asked about their motivations for going, the women cited a mix of revulsion for Trump and as well as his policies.
Rapper Kanye West, who recently declared that if he had voted in the recent presidential election, it would have been for Donald Trump, has been spotted entering Trump Tower.
Fake news, usually with outrageous clickbait headlines, is warping our sense of what is real and what isn't.
Since Donald Trump's extraordinary election victory last week, I've seen Americans around me reacted in a range of ways - celebration, street protests, crying on public transport. But one reaction that's less visible have been the quiet, concerned calls to health clinics by some women looking to obtain IUDs.
A chunk of the country was struck dumb with the election of Donald Trump. But something inaudible rang out the next day – a silent but piercing alarm, rousing some people to action.
"The sun is up," Barack Obama said on Wednesday morning, a fact so simple, so obvious, but one he nevertheless clearly thought many Americans needed to be reminded of as they woke to first day of a new era.
"You're going to lose," a man shouted in Donald Trump's face on Tuesday morning as he made his way through the Manhattan polling place to cast his vote.
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