The Daily - From Resistance to Reflection
Episode Date: November 19, 2024Warning: this episode contains strong language.For the past two weeks, Lynsea Garrison of “The Daily” has been talking to people who were part of a movement, known as the resistance, that opposed ...Donald Trump’s first term as president.With Mr. Trump preparing to again retake the White House, she asked those past protesters how they might react this time.Background reading: Was Mr. Trump’s election a setback for women? Even women do not agree.Nonprofits have vowed a new resistance. Will donors pay up?For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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You have the capacity to do extraordinary good in the world.
And so to everyone who is watching, do not despair.
This is not a time to throw up our hands.
This is a time to throw up our hands. This is a time to roll up our sleeves.
This is a time to organize, to mobilize, and to stay engaged for the sake of freedom and
justice and the future that we all know we can build together.
From the New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi,
and this is The Daily.
When Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016,
it prompted an outpouring of protests,
particularly by women,
a movement that came to be known as the Resistance.
For the past two weeks, Daily Producer Lindsay Garrison has been talking to people who were
part of that movement, asking them what they're doing after Trump's win this time.
Today.
What they said about the state of the resistance in the next Trump era.
It's Tuesday, November 19th.
Hello.
Hi, Vanessa.
Hi, how are you? Hey, I'm good. I'm good.
A few days after the election, I called Vanessa Ruble.
She lives on five acres of desert in Southern California.
So what is that?
It's makingies right now.
You're hearing in the background.
You're hearing Byron who is a parrot.
Oh really?
We run a animal sanctuary.
Well actually it's a sanctuary for humans and animals.
And we have a ton of different kinds of animals.
So there are like emus roaming around and then we have a ton of dogs and pigs and,
and we have a zebra. That's a, that's pretty intense.
It is intense. It's a very different life. It's a very different life than the one Vanessa
was leading eight years ago, when she was living in New York City, running a company in the music
industry, and thought the country was about to elect its first woman president.
I had been watching the election with friends.
There was already a party planned in Brooklyn, and we had expected to go roll out to that
party and celebrate with everyone.
And when things started going south, I just kept saying, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
this can't happen. This is no way there's no way. You know, it
felt like there had been a death in the room, you know, like
someone had died. And that feeling, there was nothing like
it. I could not believe that that was the world we are living in. And I could not believe someone who had
been accused of rape and sexual harassment and so on and so
forth. People would have rather have that person in the White
House. And I really do think it was because she was a woman. And then I woke up the next day and I was like,
well, either I'm going to lay down and die or I'm going to do something about this. And
that anger was very motivating. So, you know, women everywhere were so incredibly upset and everyone gathered on one Facebook page.
First it started as just a Facebook group. It started so small, it would be like 20 members
starting a Facebook group. And I became one of the leaders of that page, in what they
could call women's market first. And I started pulling people in to organize who I knew could make this happen.
At that time, they were looking for leadership positions.
And I felt like, okay, this is what I served.
This is the oath I took to this country.
Team Marie Hannibal served in the Marine Corps for 20 years.
She's a retired gunnery sergeant.
I didn't go into combat for nothing. And now I'm in a space where I feel like our rights are being taken away even here on the homeland. So what was the purpose of
my military service? I felt like I had to do something. I think at that time, for me, it was really about the women's rights.
And I'm a black woman, so not just the veteran.
The black woman in me, the woman in me, prior to coming into the Marine Corps,
I was that 17-year-old who had an abortion.
I was that child in the abortion clinic.
That was me.
That's my story.
So for me, it was more so the women's rights, if that makes sense.
So you thought under a Trump administration, there was a real possibility that abortion access
could be denied?
Oh, I knew it. I knew it. That's all he pushed. That's all he talked about. And so let's talk
about these things now so that it doesn't happen. Let's make sure we're advocating for these things
now so that, you know, it won't happen.
And then I'm getting word of, okay, maybe we can protest.
Okay.
Maybe we should protest.
Now what?
And then from there, I started calling people that I knew in different states to
kind of help me because this was definitely new to my world health.
kind of helped me because this was definitely new to my warehouse.
And lo and behold, women veterans started stepping up and it just grew legs.
It just grew into something. I don't think anyone first of all.
You know, I was on Facebook and I started seeing all the posts because
it just had started going viral.
What is this?
What is this march? And when I got the call to action, you know,
we're gonna march, I was just like, wow, I know what to do
with this. And I started Women's March Pennsylvania. I'm down to mobilize my
state of South Carolina to not take on getting Rhode Island together.
At some point, it just took a life of its own.
It was like this wave, particularly amongst women, but also with our male allies, because
we don't do this without our male allies.
People felt like they had to try and do something about this.
People are indignant.
People are furious.
I think it was rage.
It was just absolute rage.
It was just a sense of fire.
Like, everybody was ready.
It was that, the ride at midnight type of feel.
Failure wasn't an option, right?
Like, you just, I don't know, it's just like a bulldozer,
and we were gonna get this done.
["The Star-Spangled Banner"]
["The Star-Spangled Banner"]
On the day of the march, you know, I stood on that stage and I looked out.
I had been kind of critical of the Pussy Hats because that wasn't directly us, that was
the Pussy Hat Project.
And I had been like, oh, well, that's a pink hat that's going to lame.
And people felt that it wasn't inclusive because not all
pussies are pink. You know, it became a little contentious. But when I got on,
you know, Capitol Hill.
It was astonishing.
I mean, just imagine looking out at miles and miles and miles of people.
It was amazing.
It was just amazing just to see, just to see.
Did it feel like the country was kind of on your side?
I mean, it felt good to be able to say, okay, most Americans feel that way.
So I would say, yeah.
It feels good to feel like, okay.
But the most part, when I meet somebody else,
I can still hold my head up high.
It was just, it was otherworldly.
It was sublime.
And I stood on the stage that day and I thought, like, this is absolutely incredible.
But we need to take this energy and harness it and create a movement.
This is just the beginning.
We'll be right back. This is just the beginning. We need to take this energy and harness it.
And so the question is, what does that look like?
And I think ultimately what it looked like was,
you know, different groups forming different organizations
to ensure that Trump did not have second term.
After the Women's March,
a number of women's rights organizations
sprouted up across the nation.
March On was one of- One of those was March On, a number of women's rights organizations sprouted up across the nation.
One of those was March On, a nonprofit that Vanessa ran.
Part of the work they did was also raise money and campaign for women running for office.
And two years later, women got into office, in record numbers in the 2018 midterm elections.
Women running and women winning was a direct result of the Women's March.
And in 2020, when Trump lost the election to Joe Biden, it felt like a triumph to activists.
Things were swinging back in the right direction.
When, you know, Biden stepped down.
And then this year, when Kamala Harris was announced as the new Democratic nominee for president, for many of the Women's March organizers, the feeling was electric.
It was this burst of hope and movement again and energy.
And I felt that deeply.
Yeah, it gave us all hope again. The outcome of this election is not what we wanted, not what we fought for, not what we
voted for.
But hear me when I say, hear me when I say, the light of America's promise will always
burn bright.
So it was, it felt again like, like there had been a death.
And I was sitting with, you know, a couple other women
and it was just like, how has this happened again?
How has this happened again?
How is this the world we live in?
Like why would we ever go back to what happened? We saw what happened. I was so extremely hopeful. I even hosted a watch party for other women veterans this year.
And we decked out the whole basement, put up little decorations, everything.
And I hosted a watch party in 2016.
And this year, it felt the same way.
Now, that night during Hillary's, I cried.
This year I did not cry.
There was no tears, but I was so very disappointed.
So we wound up, I think we closed up shop at about 1130.
They left this house so sad. So very sad. But yeah, it was, it didn't hit
me as bad because maybe I mentally prepared for it. Maybe I kind of knew it. But at the
end of the day, women are still looked at as not worthy, no matter what their resumes
look like, no matter how many degrees, it does not matter.
So I think this year, I was just defeated in knowing that, yep, we really have not progressed.
You know, you said in 2016, there was a fire.
There was a fire. There was a fire. I feel like this year, I feel like this year, I feel like there's a defeat. I feel like this year, I feel like there's a defeat.
I feel like before there was hope, and now it feels very dark.
We were all stunned.
I mean, the first time around we were stunned.
Now it's like people are catatonic.
I feel like 2016, we were mad as hell.
And I say we're not mad as hell now.
So I felt like this time was more as a slap in the face
and more particularly for black women.
Because the first time, and I can say my military background
has allowed me to see up close and personal how people felt about
Hillary Clinton and these potential emails and the mistrust they had of her.
But now it's the mind now you didn't have any kind of conspiracy or email
gate to contend with. So now what's your excuse?
And people gave the damnedest excuse from, I just don't know enough about her,
to nobody in Oakland really likes her, to she's locking up our own people.
So it was such a mirage of excuses
that tells you in a nutshell it really wasn't about any of those things.
So this will hurt
a little bit more.
America did what America did.
So what do you do with that?
I mean, what do you do with that?
My daughter, my youngest is 20
and she voted for the first time this year.
And the first thing I got back from my youngest
was I'm literally sick right now, like physically
sick.
Like, how did this happen twice, mom?
Like, mom, what do we do next?
I have no idea.
So many people have asked me, are we protesting what we do with these, put me in coach, but
I don't know what to put them into.
I don't even know if I want wanna get back out there and protest.
And why don't you know whether you'd wanna get out there
and protest again this time?
Because what did I change the first time?
I don't know if I can really say we achieved a goal.
We may have slowed some things down,
but I don't know if he really changed his through.
I don't know if had we not done that,
would that have changed the trajectory of what happened during
his presidency, would it have been worse?
So those are questions I have to ask myself.
But did he really accomplish things?
I honestly don't know.
And I'm just tired.
So I got to ask myself, what is protesting?
What is putting on that cape again
and getting my big old
blow horn out again? What is that going to do for us this time around? When it did nothing
the first time.
I really believed that protest was the way to affect change. I mean, I was, I got into mom's demand action really active in that for, you know, responsible
gun ownership.
And I was there protesting for the Kavanaugh hearings.
And guess what?
It still all happened, right?
Kavanaugh still got election.
Kids are still getting killed in schools.
Roe versus Wade still got reversed.
Here we are eight years later, and not only did Trump win,
but he won the popular vote.
America spoke, and he won.
I mourn for the America that I thought I knew.
I thought our country wanted different things than him,
but by a free and fair election, this is what they want.
Whereas before we can say we were the majority,
this is not what the country wants and we will stand against it. We don't have that mandate this time around.
And at this point, fighting this administration is fighting a democratic election.
Honestly, my first reaction was, you know what, America? Pardon my French, but fuck it. If that's how you feel about it, have it America.
You voted for this.
Buckle up.
It's going to get bad.
And I'm going to say, I told you so.
Would you consider marching again?
Is there talk about marching?
Uh, yeah.
And it's not going over real well.
I know Women's March is planning a march on January 18th.
They're saying it's the People's March. Well, you know what? In my mind, the people voted for Trump.
When I watched Kamala Harris' concession speech, people were saying how inspiring it was.
Don't ever give up because she said that. I'm like, no, this is the way. I don't, no, no, no, no.
At a certain point, no, you have to give up.
Like, I don't have the energy or any battery left in me
to do anything other than to play for myself.
And to answer your question for me personally, no.
I don't know any organizer from the original Women's March
that thinks marching right now is a good idea.
And why don't you think it's a good idea?
that things marching right now is a good idea. And why don't you think it's a good idea?
To me, it kind of feels like trying to recreate something
that should never be recreated
or should have never had to have been recreated.
I don't know, have you ever,
this is probably a stupid analogy,
but let me just bring it up.
Have you ever gone to a restaurant with your partner and had like the best meal
and then you go back and it's like it sucked. That's kind of the way I feel about the women's
march right now. It's like I can never recreate for me what that moment was in history and in my life.
And I don't want to.
And now I'm going to just do something else.
I'm going a little more inward.
So that, yeah, I guess I'm trying a different restaurant. There needs to be some time to reflect and regroup and really look at ourselves and say,
what are we doing wrong?
Like where do we go from here?
And what do you plan on doing instead?
I mean, that's really hard.
That is the question, right?
Like, well, what do you do?
I don't know.
But the answer is probably not right before us.
If we jump to the conclusion right away and say, okay, well, then we need to do X line Z. Like, are we not doing a disservice to a lesson that we
should learn from this? Like, maybe we need to be more
thoughtful about it and examine how we may have played a role in it.
So it's the time to reflect and regroup,
but it's not the time to march.
I don't think that marching will do any good.
That's not the direction we should go in. We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
On Monday, President-elect Donald Trump confirmed that he intends to declare a national emergency
and use the U.S. military, in some form, to assist in his plans for mass deportations
of undocumented immigrants.
Trump was responding to a post made by the head of the conservative group, Judicial Watch,
that said Trump's administration
would quote, declare a national emergency and use military assets to address illegal
immigration through a mass deportation program.
On his social media platform, Truth Social, Trump responded with the comment, true.
Congress has granted presidents broad power to declare national emergencies at their discretion.
And Trump nominated Sean Duffy, a former Republican congressman from Wisconsin and Fox business
host and whose wife, Rachel Campos Duffy, is a Fox news host as his choice to lead
the transportation department.
Trump continued to deliberate over candidates for several high-level positions,
including Treasury Secretary, a post that will be crucial to his economic agenda.
Today's episode was produced by Lindsay Garrison with help from Sydney Harper and Eric Krupke.
It was edited by Devon Taylor, Ben Calhoun, and Lexi Diao.
Research Assistance by Susan Lee contains original music by Dan Powell, Rowan Nimes Stowe,
Alicia Baitup, and Marian Lozano, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben
Landsverk of Wonderly.
That's it for the daily. I'm Sabrina Tavernisi. See you tomorrow.