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Cofounder and co organizer of the womens march, coauthor of double booked together we rise behind the scenes of the protest heard around the world. January 21 it will be the anniversary of the largest protest in american history. How did you get involved . Take us back to the moment you first decided you could do this. Guest i was just like everybody else. I had a couple of moments of despair after the election sitting on line just like everybody else to figure out and analyze why are we in the situation why are we seeing posts and event about this mar march. I made a comment and said i hopt you include muslim women and communities because it was one of the groups mott describe notn the description of the event. It was one of the original founders of that kind of page that was already in conversation and carbon purveyors who has been working on criminal Justice Reform and they were already in conversation. At the moment the moment i madey they were like we have a theory that comes with this and her name is lynn and she is an organizer and when that has to be included in this work and they were absolutely so that is how i joined the womens march. Originally when i went to the table, we came with some conditions. Especially in light of the critiques but this was started by white women and me and didnt want to be known as the one black woman at the march and we also had very important roles. She did it with a assistance in the operations. I was a fund raiser and worked on the principal platform that we created and carmen was in charge of all of the daily. It was a lot of work into something we have to think about if we had the fortitude and the resources to engage in that and it was amazing. Host tell us your favorite moment of the march on washington. Guest not many people know the story but about a week and a half when it happened i was in a hotel room watching msnbc and i saw a man by the name of charlie who was the inauguration announcer for about 60 us and he has done every book for both democrat and republican except when donald trump came he fired him and didnt want him to be the announcer. At the same time, his wife also died literally in the same period when he was asked not to be the announcer and i was so moved by that i was literally in my hotel room bawling my eyes out. I didnt know who he was and i went back home to the headquarters where all this organizing was happening. I said everybody has got to stop. Everyone is like who is he. He is an inauguration announcer and trump fired him, his wife died, he will not end his life in this way. If you find him, bring him and i went on a mission. I contacted every organizer i knew that worked on the white house in the past and i found them and brought him to the womens march and he was the announcer at the march which was larger and the most beautiful moment is when he showed up and here is this man in his 80s who have so much joy. I cant explain to you the energy and gratitude of such a difficult moment in his life after he just lost his wife and job he had for over 60 years. It gave me so much joy and it was a personal moment for me me that will resonate forever. Host i do remember that story and im glad you took action. In fact, that idea and the things that touch us all. People like you take action. Its so much at the heart of what is the story of this book. Many of you were at the march but most of you dont know what it took, with a behind the scenes stories are so tell us more about those stories and what it took to put on the largest protest that ever happened in washington, d. C. , similarly new york city and then if im not mistaken, 600 other places across the country and on every continent across the globe. That is what is most important about the book is that you get to go behind the scenes and here virtually and also the pain and hard work and perseverance and be critiques and having to work with the forces that were out there and also what people dont realize is most of us didnt know each other so it is not like an established organization that has been around for 50 years. Most of us have never organized a day in our life. We walked in with these women that have never marched, women that were teachers, entrepreneurs, people from the past that were so moved by this kind of election gone wrong that they were ready to roll up their sleeves and give whatever talent they have so we were getting to know people at the same time that we have organized this march. We had a mission here. What did we want people to feel and they gothey got their januad 2017 and there were a lot of hard minds you will hear about in the book. They had a little bit of resentment and not specifically but in general like welcome now you feel directly impacted, targeted, but we come from a community that. Fullstop for a lonfelt for a longtime and as an this post9 11 america i couldnt help but think if she were around 15 years ago and obviously we have of course other women who were from the communities so there was a lot of conversation we had to have. We talked about what we were going to be standing for. Reproductive rights and equal pay. We are all about these reproductive rights and pay but lets have a deeper conversation. Did you know that white women dont get paid the same as men and what about immigrant women who dont get paid the same so there also has to be an infusion of this idea around the race analysis that women never have to have this race analysis or they didnt feel the need to talk about race and th we were critiqued very forcefully, in this idea of why we were being divisive. I said maybe if we talked about it before we wouldnt be in this situation we got ourselves in so the book is a behind the scene account of how you got the largest protest in ten weeks and how women are questioned every step of the way. Our permit at the front page of the Washington Post and the fact that people didnt believe that we were capable of getting a permit which is the easiest thing to do when you are organizing a mobilization and everybody called it day in day out until one day i was like even if we dont get a permit we still show up. Those are my streets and we are showing up. A lot of that happened and it was through all the obstacles and Relationship Building these women are our sisters and a half devolvehalfthey have evolved. Its basically the local Police Department in the dc area, the metropolitan police. How many people do you think are going to be here . Maybe 200,000. And they were like thats pretty impressive but when we got there about a million extra people came and it was beautiful. It was amazing. I was at the march and there was a definite sense that the attempt was huge and the messages were many that the spirit was the same, which was one of a sort of fierce love and inclusion. I was pleased to see as a policy person myself into someone that says weve got to know what we are fighting for. Weve got to know what the vision is even in the stork moments i was pleased to see the womens march put out a platform in the weeks before the march, and i as soon as i saw it i thought this is a platform i can get behind. This will transform the country and includes some issues that are quite unknown to many of the white women who are knitting hats but who in this moment what a powerful opportunity to educate them, and its nocome as if they would say no but its i havent heard that before. So lets talk about the marching platform and what you are going to do with that. Host one of the things we believe we lost in places that wisconsin and michigan and states that we should have won is because we felt that these Democratic Party or democrats in general were focusing on vote for us because we are not them. Vote for us because they are racist, or they are a basket of deplorable. I am moved by things i care about and communities i love. I am moved by the fact i have a role to play in protecting the most marginalized people, so what we wanted to bring forth it isnt just about we are here because we are antitrump come hes just a manifestation of the unfortunate disease. He wanted people to come and like they are marching for something and we do have values and principles we stand for so we went on a mission to find about 27 of the most brilliant women and identifying folks in the country to say we want to put together a platform that speaks to everyone and being able to read a platform and people say i havent really thought about this but it makes sense and i care about these issues and this brings me to the table. I want to come to the table because i believe that immigrants in the country deserve to be treated with dignity and respect, because Women Deserve equal pay and womens bodies should be their choices and the government shouldnt be legislating them. Always put forth was the brilliance of women coming together saying this is what we believe in. We are not marching against one person we are marching for these things and against all these bad and misogyny. I remember reading an article maybe two weeks before the march last year that said this was the boldest most intersectional popcorn thats come out of every march historically. Its going to be a year of transformational political change. What is the womens march doing now in this moment and does the platform play a role in setting a vision for the next wave of candidates who is going to come across the country with this 2018 the quick for you . Guest january 21, 2017 the organized the biggest protest in history and could have went ho home. That is pretty interesting to put on your resume. We have so much access to capital and didnt just want to drop it. We wanted to find ways to continue to engage these folks that marched with us and stood with us and felt that kind of inspiration but we all felt on that day and we have been able to engage him on the first year first actions after the 90 day march getting people but that town hall we were doing basic organizing. To be able to collect even more along the way that said i didnt go to the womens march but watched on t it on tv and it was amazing. I want to connect. Moving forward, a group that connects the Media Attention we went up against the nra is put up put up avideo with actual cle womens march and basically calling on people in the country that are nra members and said youve got to come out and face these people with a clenched sense of truth that means places that are open. If we have been met with and we could have stayed back and said let them do what they want but we said no we are going to fight back and stand up. So we had a whole group of women that said i am all about this fierce old leadership and ive never experienced this in a way that is so bold and then we went to organizing the largest compression in four years the last one was 1977 in texas and ever since then, there is an issuesbased but for the actual convention we were the first and it was amazing and inspirational and people will tell you weve never been in a place that was so organized and intangible about the people we put forth. The speakers were over 65 women of color and putting forth the most directly impacted and giving instructions to folks then we continued to build the credibility and said we know what we are doing to trust us on this and having to come back over and over to prove that we knew what we were doing and here we are what we are doing now is taking the momentum to build political power in 2018. What is it that you do the day after the marching weeks after the march and months after. We launched power to the polls on the oneyear anniversary, 2018 and we are doing a National Tour. We are not the first to do this work. Local communities including offcolor this is what they do all day long but coming to the Community Gives them our platform to say follow us here are the people that will win in states like arizona. Looking at Voter Suppression laws have to pull out 1. 5 million registered in the additional million. 5 across the movement with the partners in order to look at 1. 5 million who have obstacles to go to the polls. People that are aligning with our values and principles i think one of the things that resonates with communities and melanie mills and community of color is that its not the lesser of two evils. What about allowing people during the primary to put their soul into people they believe in othe people that believe in ther cause and understanding that in november we dont have a choice, but what if we were able to win the primaries and folks that have been part of the movement. Its telling people we are going to win constantly in 2018. Ie and pretty positive we are going to have a big win. But im pretty positive we are going to make history and have governorships given to the representatives of communities and we will sit back and say we were when we have the first native governor in idaho or muslim governor in michigan are black woman governor in georgia and i wante want it to be a stoi tell my grandkids 40 years from now. Host i couldnt agree more. Lets go back for the second to the book. The book is now on sale and is a beautiful commemoration of people who went to the march and were alive when the march happened or saw it on television can own. There are a lot of stories and testimonials from people you might not expect, so what is one of the chapters that may be surprising to you or to the readers . Guest the book to me is a historical artifact. The story is directly from the march and its not a secondhand. You know from history womens voices have always been erased even in light of the commemoration of doctor king. There was a lot of baker and Coretta Scott king. We were a new generation that said our revolution will be written and televised. It will be written in our voices and it also includes essays from celebrities and a prominent activists and leaders in this country and prominent leaders. One of the essays in the book is written by my mentor that works at the Schaumburg Center and is older and has been around since the day the Civil Rights Movement new Coretta Scott king. But in fact reaching back to us and she always reminds us of the shoulders of the people we stand on. And how we move forward as anyone in this movement right now needs to understand theres nothing you arthere isnothing y. You are using a legacy of people. So for me to stand here and say i am unapologetically muslim and she is a black muslim women and 2018 in her words are so inspirational. To see so much pain and trauma in the midst of the movement and here she is still a live during the reemergence of the Civil Rights Movement i think anyone that is still feeling this will feel a lot of hope. Host thats wonderful. For the program we were talking about your family and children were just bringing into the room the lionesses of the Civil Rights Movement and all that went into what is universally praised across the ideological spectrum and how much sacrifice and pain and blood and sweat went into it and you were talking about watching the movie selma with your kids. Can you share that with the viewers . Guest people often see us on National Television sharing the stories or the cover of a magazine and think this work is glamorous and unfortunately it is not and nobody wants to be on the frontline of the movement or a woman of color or a Palestinian Muslim American Woman and a she jobhijab. To my children its a defamation of my character and its been hard and what people forget is we are mothers, many of the womewomen to be organized with r parents and to have to sit and explain to your children why some people want to create a monster out of your mother that you love dearly who does your laundry and cooks dinner for you. I remember taking my kids to see selma. Those that marched and were part of the movement at the time sacrificed much more than we are sacrificing right now but when my kids get to see me engaging in civil disobedience and see the different elements of the organizing friends coming home around the table and here we are talking about this next action and others gathering in peoples homes so theres a lot of imagery that resonated with my kids and the slander of the threats that they received a. That helped me to have a conversation with my kids. I do this because i love my children and want them to live in a country that respects them and lets them. But that comes with risks and i explained to my children if this were easy everybody would be giving and wdoing it and we woue having to fight for our rights because it would be inevitable so those are the movies and narratives coming out and bringing forth stories in a visual way. Those tha that worry about the safety of their parents and mom in my case. Sometimes my carriage are very edgy and text be like for you and whos with you. And i dont think kids need to worry about where their mother is especially 6 00 on a tuesday night. But our two struggled and have security detail and i dont always bring my kids to public things anymore because i dont want people to make connections in that way and that hurts my heart because i dont want them to participate in a way tha that maybthat way thatmaybe temperatt happen. Host thank you for sharing that. This is a moment right now are so many women are finding their voices. It is unbelievable. Women are finding their voices in the movement and moving into politics and have a Record Number of women saying fine. I never thought politics is something i would have to do personally but its clear system is broken and people currently in power do not have my community or my children are the future of the planets interest at heart. Take me into the trade where you have thousands of women or its going to have been in nevada where you have the anniversary of the womens march of 2017 and i think the main one is going to be nevada. What does it feel like to be right now a woman finding her voice . Who are the women that ar are ge to the march doing things theyve never done before . Guest ive been traveling the country the past year ive been too vocal indiana, kentucky, parts of florida, texas, michigan you name it ive been there. Believe it or not the people that come out for me often times are millennial age or even younger or its one of the reasons the opposition is really shaken up. What do you have that they are attracted to and i think women in general are attracted to the fact that we believe in the power and the womens march allows you to feel like your individual powers of often times its like you have to be part of an institution or a particular degree and what we did in the march as i said earlier everybody had a role to play and it shows you didnt have to be an organizer to be part of the movement so they are finally saying even i can be part of the movement and organize in my community and participate in a town hall meeting . Absolutely and that is what it has instilled. I think back on that very dreadful day of the inauguration and i thought to myself what if therthatthere wasnt a womens h obviously i dont know where we would be as a country if we didnt have that immediate moment after such a dreadful day as a wakeup we are here, we are united, we know what we need to do a skit on the same page and fight together i dont believe we would have to choose in the time to say im running for office are watching the winds os that we saw in virginia and new jersey and alabama so we are in this new moment and im proud to have this large group of women but also those that organize across the country and across the road who have reminded them that you are powerful and then even more powerful than when we organize together. And a lot of these movements are getting people to ridge and we need courage in this moment. We all have it in us. Its not something you find something that is exterior to us. There has to be a moment where it is unleashed and i think this year weve unleashed of courage among groups of people including women. Ive been thinking about this idea of courage and if theres one worthere isone word that i s what we need right now and what should unite all of us who believe in a better america and a better world is we need courage and our elected officials to have courage to stand up for those who are targeted and that is something that descends immediately when the leader has to does not have courage. Tell us about how you started. I want to go into the inner city schools and work with people of color. That was my passion. 9 11 happened. I was 20yearsold, here i was muslim american, never really thought about it. It was never something that was at the forefront of my mind, and then here comes a very tragic day i was walking home in brooklyn and seeing my local community closed down at the moment i didnt know what happened because there was no twitter at a time on facebook. There was no cell phone service. I realized what had happened and i went from being this ordinary girl in brooklyn. In a tragic event that killed millions and my fellow new yorkers by perspectives changed literally within a matter of minutes and i remembered a few weeks after 9 11 happened being at the mosque and people came crying saying someone came to my home and took my husband and i was like what do you mean this doesnt make sense to me but in fact it did happen. The communities i came from and loved and i was very radicalized at that moment. I said this is the right. Why would they be to her rise to something. Volunteering to find services for them and then eventually it had become my fulltime to defend the community and my family and children and myself. My entry point was 9 11 and its been still a connection 16 years later. Host how did you get your analysis is . Those have been locked in with other identities. To the fact demand in the bronx and your family in the community in brooklyn, so where did that come from and then how did you use that absent for the sort of connection that you made when you became a leader for social justice in this very intersectional way in new york to cross those bridges in the womens march context . Guest i went to the high school in brooklyn. There was a lot of activity in my schools where you walk in in the mornings everybody was stopped and frisked but it was about 90 africanamerican. Before they were School Safety officers so i started reflecting after watching these people coming in and saying what was that is cominit wasbut is comino understand this profiling. I went to a school where there were Police Officers arresting kids in my school and i started connecting the dots. Reading about whats going on in the world then i started venturing out a sword seeking coalitions and talked to the organizers and they would think you should come to this and th that. But please really solidified and clicked with me was around the racial and religious profiling by the Police Department as a discriminatory policy to be on oriented surveillance and we built build a coalition around t here in new york city. Not only did we buil build the coalition but there were that te landmarks of the legislation and ever since then i will never work on any issue without the Racial Justice standpoint. I come from a very Diverse Community so i dont consider myself to be an ally. Racial justice came into me on everything like immigration. When you think about reproductive rights, who are the most directly impacted of color, black women. When you think of issues of equal pay, the inequality there needs to be a Racial Justice analysis to that as well. And i also realized as i note with organizers here in new york city, we cant win them all. White people cant win them all. Weve got to bring it together. In the beginning, people thought we were crazy which is why we wanted to make it so visible and you will read more about that in the book. When we did you and the principles, people said this here we go again. They are going to grow a whole bunch of issues together. How will you fight all these issues. But actually it was not distracting at all we were intersectional human beings. Why would we force people to prioritize what we think is important. What is the thing that most directly impacts them. So i was doing this organizing before people were calling it into sectional. In the past five or six years into my organizing work when i finally woke up and said this isnt going to work. Weve got to organize together. How do you create this i dont know how you can connect reproductive rights to immigration like these things dont connect for the viral justice and Economic Justice and immigration. We have created a web now that is very clear and easily digestible to people and now people are starting to get it and that is why you will see books like the sierra club at the rallies and thats never happened before. Its the fact of the matter. I speak from personal experience ive never seen Environmental Justice groups show up on this basis and even in the Racial Justice basis here we are with women having access to the reproductive justice and right incarcerated women. Theres opportunities but in some ways was not happening. If that is where we are im good with that. Host amazing accomplishment. As you said, having the day after that sparsely attended dishonest inauguration and inaugural address to have a way for people to come to put their bodies on the line and show by moving. All the way down to washington, d. C. It sets the stage for what came right after which was the muslim band and here in new york to protest for people went straight to the airport. There was this sense of w me can be powerful and show that we still did not win the popular vote but this country is different than the value is now. In many ways it really sparked this moment but we are still in where they have their Congress Person on speed dial and thinking that they would do things to protect democracies that they never thought. And now i hear after the inauguration what do you think what are we doing well and what do we still need to do better . Guest there has been consistent momentum since january 21 of last year. A week after, here we are totally exhausted from the march and again very personal for me. I was so moved to see the people show up all around the country and it shows the decentralized movement. Ever since then, the march for the scum of the march for Racial Justice, really just consistent opportunities. We didnt win at the end but watching we knew they wouldnt be able to beat us that way which is how we lost recently but watching the pushback everything thats come forth on the administration there has been a response to. Its not perfect and it will never be perfect. Even to the extreme radical left that is a huge spectrum of people you are trying to organize and what i say to people alpeople over time as wet going to have this same strategy is what we are seeing manifest in the resistance now. People want to focus on the electoral strategy. But my thing in the movement is that its the messy part. Gets to do what. As long as we are all on the same page it doesnt matter how we get there and i think that is the understanding we are not clear on. Dont critique me for the politics you may not believe in as a tool. I believe in it as a tool but maybe you can continue to do the visible organizing and action in the civil disobedience. This year i will focus on in a total organizing. The resistance is strong and will be dysfunctional sometimes. There will be organizations within one another where the leaders may disagree on a particular policy. Sometimes there will be negotiations and compromises. This is the moment we may not have to compromise because we are playing on the extremes and i think that is good for us in the resistance. We are so polarized as a nation right now it is easier to say argue with us or them. So for example i will give you a visual example we went to a womens march supports on the local groups in la to do a march outside of senator feinsteins office telling her it isnt in the final bill. We want you to be courageous. It was interesting here we were a couple hundred standing with the dreamers and in senator feinsteins office and there was a counter protest and it was a counter protest that was pretty significant, 4 00 on a wednesd wednesday. About 40 people. It was an important moment when you had the media there to portray are you on this side of the people talking about justice, dignity and respect or are you on this side. If you dont get off the sidelines in my personal opinion and weve heard this many times before if you dont pick a side you are on the side of the oppressor and i hope people understand. We need to allow people to disagree. They want to agree with me im not going to agree with liberals, im a progressive i may not agree with people that are neoliberals that we can all agree they all deserve to have the debates and treated with dignity and respect. If we can do that, God Bless America because of the idea and resistance that unity is not uniformity. The endgame here that all marginalized communities are protected and we all lived prosperous, full Productive Lives in this country. How we get there i dont care. Host part of the marginalized groups you just alluded to there is a demographic that voted majority for donald chump even though someone from their demographic was on the opposing ticket. 53 according to the exit polls voted for donald trump and continued to vote for republicans whose agenda whether it is their economic agenda without a safety net or a voice at work or reproductive rights and family leave and childcare has no support for the kind of livelife that Women Deserve to e and yet white women, not latina women, not africanamerican women, not native american women, white women are still supporting a party that we might say is not supporting you and there are so many who have their lives transformed. What do you say to them . To those that may not have marched but otherwise share their culture and beliefs . We are fighting for them and believe in their potential to do the right thing. I know that they continue to oftentimes disappoint. What i ask people to do, and i do this myself, i have been known as a critic of the Democratic Party for a long time and i think if people want your values and principles and dont assume that the movement is about and the reason i say that is in the last year we had gotten into a big controversy about pro abortion and pro life and do the women act as a part of the movement. We never said we were a pro abortion movement. We are very intentional about the choice. If a woman chooses to keep her baby, we respect her. Women choose for many reasons and its not a decision that is easy to make. I think this idea of putting women against each other i believe in the agencies to make any choices whether its about their bodies with thei or theirr careers were children when men should bwomenshould be able to d that is important because it opens up an opportunity to see themselves maybe this i isnt wt i thought it was. This is another critique we have a long history of. We have sons and fathers and uncles and brothers who need to be a part of this conversation and many mothers and the movement in particular black mothers and women of color have children who are incarcerated or subject twere subject to policee or gun violence. They want their families to be protected so i think wakeup, listen to us, here us. Dont listen to respond but where we are coming from. We want a quality education for our children. We want to be able to get a job based on their qualifications and credentials. In the womens march we have out in ohio a black woman leading an effort called confronting white womanhood. A workshop at the convention originally people thought it was controversial. They took the risk and they were beautiful, inspirational, well thought out kind of workshops together and we put it in a room and a love of women that came to the convention were white. We have a photo that is one of the most remarkable. Hundreds already went in and there was a line outside. We had to repeat the next day to find room so we do know that therthere are women in the couny that are starting to analyze themselves and say wait a minute i am not a bad person, but i understand that somehow unintentionally i have been complicit in some of the suffering that has happened. They want to analyze and dissect it and learn how to overcome it so they can be true allies and accomplices and say i have something to learn. Theres an opportunity here to the. We are immediately we see someone that says something we dont like and we engage in this culture we tear them to shreds instead of saying wait a minute i heard you say this, but what did you really mean by that . For someone to say i was wrong. We dont give people the opportunity to. The power to the polls is going to be a moment for women to sit and reflect and come out strong in 2018. Host i was on cspan now almost two years ago when a man called in from South Carolina and said exactly that, im a white male and im prejudice and he went on to talk about things but then he ended by saying something that i think we know because the video went viral so he said i want to be a better american. What can i do to change and i completely agree it is so important those of us that now have this huge megaphone use it to invite people in to recognize that the way some of the wildest people on the right wing have created this story of fear that people like you and me are hurting america or threatening their families that that is a lie and one of the oldest lives in the founding of the country and that kind of fear has been manipulated and has brought Us Donald Trump that is hurting our standing in the world in a way thats now actually millions of white americans are having second thoughts. Guest in th the the communii go they may never have had this conversation and being able to see that people ask anything theres nothing you can ask me thats going to hurt my feelin feelings. Ask me about it. If you want to ask how can i be a feminist and dress modestly i will tell you why. Why is this, what about this happening and i dont understand why they do that. Literally allowing people to feel they can have an honest conversation with me. I remember going to the university of massachusetts amherst and i was a lecture series and the professors are running around the school like kids are coming to protest. They were shut up about it. Its the local college on the campus and it was some conservative kids they are more than welcome to come and they come to the event wearing wind up with professors sitting in front of them come in behind the, behind them andwhen i saw s going to be fine. I get up and do my usual and they have an assumption of what i was going to say and how i was going to present myself. It was like some dramatic mome moment. Before that i got a standing ovation. I didnt think much of it. When outside i caught the eye of one of the kids and he looked at me and smiled a little bit to see what kind of reaction i was going to get and then he into te literally started walking towards me and the crown parted and i put out my hands to him and said his name and i appreciate you can today. People told me you were going to protest. What happened. I didnt agree with everything that you said. What made you come to that and he said this is the most profound thing. I was moved. Im supposed to give you a chance and i said to myself here you are a 19yearold College Student and whether you feel like youre on my side or not, give people a chance. And if after you still dont agree with us or think we are the right group for you can organize with me were still come to the same table i come even though we have a different issue or political issue or social issue i think giving people a chance, transformative things happen. I walked away that they saying giving people a chance is such a simple thing we can do in the moment. Host so, together we rise the commemoration, the behind the scenes how we wish we have these other big marches and moments in social justice history. It is an incredible pleasure to have this book and its coming out right now on the eve of the oneyear anniversary. We have about 30 seconds left. Tell us whats going to happen for the weekend of the oneyear anniversary of the womens march. Guest its commemorating the largest single day protest in history by launching into kicking off a National Campaign called the power to the polls which will be a National Tour engaging and registering voters across the country, because we will win in 2018 and the headline will be women led us to this victory. It is going to share with all of us the behind the scenes march, but its one of the most inspirational physical things in your hand with beautiful photography and the faces of the people that march on every corner of the world and you want to have it and show your great grandchildren. Host thank you so much, linda

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