I don't always agree with Sherry Wolf (or with anyone always, of course) but the comments below seem to me about right. In Portland, there were, by at least one count, 50,000 (so, proportionately a better turnout than NYC). Many were masked, and I appreciate all those protecting everyone's health in the crowd.
I've heard that there are nationwide calls for further marches April 19 & May 1, but have not seen anything definite for PDX. There is, however, an upcoming meeting April 12 dedicated to building long-term alliances--not just mobilizing people to protest but organizing to gain positive changes. Portland Rising: The Power of Coalition from Jobs with Justice & others: Saturday, April 12, 2025 10:00 AM-12:00PM at P.A.T. Hall, 345 NE 8th Ave., Portland, OR 97232. Wheelchair accessible; Masks required and provided. https://actionnetwork.org/events/portland-rising-the-power-of-coalition
Important to remember also that in discussing 'nonviolent' protests, the violence generally comes from the police, so the peacefulness, some have suggested, comes from police having underestimated turnout (and thus being unprepared for encountering the crowd) or indifference to the actions of old white people likely to go home after the march.
Sherry Wolf posts:
5 takeaways from April 5th in NYC:
- 100,000 came out—mostly as individuals and not organized in groups, folks who don’t usually or ever protest on a day the city’s far left leadership was in DC for the massive Palestine protest there. Notably, thousands in NYC wore keffiyehs & carried signs about Gaza, it’s too intertwined with our national disaster to be scrubbed from an NYC protest
- Multigenerational, but skewed whiter and a bit older than NYC overall, indicating both the silos we’re in and that it was disproportionately citizens who don’t fear deportation but loss of careers, social security, Medicare, etc. these were downwardly mobile middle- and working-class people with something to lose
- The politically broad but hollow call to action—“Hands Off”— meant that the momentary vacuum could be filled by individuals or small groups putting forward chants and slogans for others, which is what I did on the march from the subway and later with union comrades for more than an hour outside the library raising explicitly anti-fascist, pro-trans and immigrant and unite and fight type chants and got tens of thousands to vigorously take them up while marching past; others did this along the way, too!
- Leftists need to learn what a united front means in practice—the denunciations online of the vacuousness of a “Hands Off” call are unhelpful; possibly 1 million people nationally turned out because they’re scared and want to find a way to fight—we need to put forward and fight for political positions inside these formations, not denounce them
- Mass actions raise the prospect of mass strikes; union leaders need to start organizing strike calls with Black, queer and immigrant groups—days of action, walk-ins, walkouts, rolling strikes—which can’t be summoned the same way as a call to action in a moment of extreme fear rage.
I know this sounds strange at this moment, but we should be ready to go on offense. The right is about to crack up, and the opportunity to democratize society will be there, if we have the presence of mind to take it.
See Corey Robin here:
https://jacobin.com/2025/04/trump-tariffs-gop-lawsuit-congress
@anarchademic FYI - we need to research who is behind upcoming mass protest on Apr 19th. That day is anniversary of day in 1776 was opening phase of American Revolution.
And April 20 is a day many suspect Trump may invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807 as it is a day Nazis celebrate Hitler.
It seems too coincidental.
I can't even figure out who is ultimately behind the 50501 thing, or how to parse that. They seem to have some progressive-democratic-party alliances ('partners'), but who knows. They note that local events are organized by local groups.
The 50501 site actually only has a handful of A19 events listed so far.
The American Revolution connection would seem to fit ideologically with some of the 50501 listed values --rah rah for the constitution, e.g.--but not so much with the emphasis on nonviolence (since revolutions are often violent).
Trying to get another big event in before the possible invocation of the insurrection act would fit with that nonviolence orientation, though, unless of course it's a bunch of agents provocateurs planning violence to encourage and justify the insurrection act.
But of course, one needs always to watch out for the provocateurs and sheepdogs and so on.
@anarchademic Out of curiosity, what source reported 50k people in Portland? The largest figure I found as of a couple days ago was 10k, which I believe I saw in the (excellent, imo) Portland Mercury article. I've been really curious about what estimates different people are putting out. I'm also curious how anyone is coming up with any of their estimates, but I never see anyone talk about that.
As for masking, I was really happy to find one person handing out free masks at the downtown Portland protest. (I had a spare and gave it to them, figuring they were better prepared to distribute it than I was.) I hope there were more people doing that, though I didn't see anyone else.
The 50,000 figure was just someone I know slightly, not sure how they calculated it. Chloe Eudaly on her newsletter mentioned 30,000; again, not sure how that was figured. I myself am not good at determining how many jellybeans in the jar.
But I definitely saw more than one person masked! Looking back at some photos I took of the crowd, where from 6-15 people's faces are visible, in each there are at least 2 in masks.