The March for Our Lives was a student-led demonstration that took place on March 24, 2018, in Washington, D.C., with over 800 sibling events throughout the United States and around the world.[4][5][6][7] According to data from Getty Images more than 830 demonstrations took place.[8] Student organizers planned the march in collaboration with the nonprofit organization Everytown for Gun Safety.[9] The event followed the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, which was reported by some media outlets as being the tipping point for gun control legislation.[10][11][12]
Date | March 24, 2018 |
---|---|
Location | Washington D.C. and over 800 other cities |
Type | Demonstration (protest) |
Theme | Gun violence in the United States Support of gun control |
Cause | School shootings in the United States |
Organized by | Members of Never Again MSD, in cooperation with Everytown for Gun Safety |
Participants |
|
Website | MarchForOurLives.com |
Protesters urged the closing of the gun show loophole, a restoration of the 1994 Federal Assault Weapons Ban, and a ban on the sale of high-capacity magazines in the United States.[13] The march was the largest student protest in American history, with millions of people estimated to have marched throughout the United States.[1][2]
Planning
Following the school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on February 14, Cameron Kasky, a junior at the school, and his classmates, announced the march four days later.[14] Also joining the march efforts are Alex Wind of Stoneman Douglas High School, who along with four friends created the "Never Again" campaign.[9] Emma González and David Hogg, also survivors of the shooting, have been vocal supporters of the march.[15]
The date was chosen in order to give students, families and others a chance to mourn first, and then on March 24, talk about gun control.[15] Organizers filed a permit application with the National Park Service during the week of February 23, and expected as many as 500,000 people to attend.[16][17] However the National Mall, which was the planned site of the main march in Washington, D.C. was reportedly already booked for March 24; the application, filed by an unidentified local student group, claimed it was for a talent show.[18][19] A permit was later obtained for Pennsylvania Avenue.[20] Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority announced it would operate extra trains for the march.[21]
The Enough! National School Walkout was held on the one month anniversary of the Stoneman Douglas shooting.[22][23] It involved students walking out from their classes for exactly seventeen minutes (one for each of the victims of the massacre)[24] and involved more than 3000 schools across the United States[25][26] and nearly one million students.[27] Thousands of students also gathered and staged a rally in Washington D.C. after observing 17 minutes of silence with their backs to the White House.[23][28] After the success of the walkout, David Hogg posted a tweet[29] that included a provocative, NRA-style advertisement calling out lawmakers for their inaction on or opposition to gun control efforts, asking "What if our politicians weren't the bitch of the NRA?", and ending with a promotion for the upcoming March.[30]
Celebrity and corporate support
Amal and George Clooney donated $500,000 to support the march and announced they would attend. Oprah Winfrey matched the Clooney donation to support the march.[31][32] Jeffrey Katzenberg and his wife Marilyn also contributed $500,000.[33] Film director and producer Steven Spielberg and actress Kate Capshaw Spielberg donated $500,000, also matching the donation of the Clooneys.[34] On February 23, Gucci announced they were also donating $500,000 towards the march.[35] Other people and organizations offering support have included Justin Bieber,[36] Gabby Giffords, Lauren Jauregui, Alyssa Milano, Moms Demand Action, Amy Schumer, St. Vincent, Harry Styles,[37] and Hayley Williams.[38][39] John Legend and Chrissy Teigen donated $25,000.[40] Jimmy Fallon has pledged to attend an event with his family.[41] Many other celebrities including Taylor Swift have donated an undisclosed amount of money towards the campaign [42] Late night host and comedian James Corden offered to make a serious speech on gun violence singling out the Parkland students and promoting the March for Our Lives event.[43] John Zimmer and Logan Green, the co-founders of Lyft, announced their support of the rallies and stated that their company would provide free rides for those attending demonstrations.[44] Dating app Bumble CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd subsequently announced that they were supporting the NeverAgain movement by banning all images of firearms on their dating application.[45]
John Cena, a pro-wrestler and actor, and Millie Bobby Brown, a British actress, applauded the March for Our Lives event at the 2018 Kids Choice Awards.[46]
Reactions
On March 21, NRA TV host Grant Stinchfield stated that "March for Our Lives is backed by radicals with a history of violent threats, language and actions." Fact-checker Politifact has rated this statement as being "without merit" and "Pants on Fire" indicating a "ridiculous claim".[47][48] Fellow NRA TV host Colion Noir, in a March 22 video called 'A March For Their Lies', said that the March for Our Lives protests are "one-sided, logic-deprived, and intellectually dishonest".[49] and that "no one would know your names".
On the day of the protests, Florida Senator Marco Rubio responded by stating: "However, many other Americans do not support a gun ban" and "view banning guns as an infringement on the Second Amendment rights of law abiding citizens that ultimately will not prevent these tragedies". He called for protesters to find "common ground with those who hold opposing views" for change to happen.[50][51]
Locations
United States
Washington, D.C.
Approximately hundreds of thousands of people marched in Washington, D.C., with estimates ranging from 200,000[52][53][54] to 850,000. The speakers—all of whom were high schoolers or younger[55]—included Marjory Stoneman Douglas students Cameron Kasky, David Hogg, and Emma González.[54]
Marchers in Washington, D.C., wore $1.05 price tags. This represented what every Florida student was worth to republican senator Marco Rubio, a figure they arrived at by dividing the National Rifle Association's total contribution to Rubio's campaigns, $3.3 million, by the total number of students in Florida, 3.1 million. [56]
External videos | |
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March For Our Lives Rally, Washington, D.C., March 24, 2108, C-SPAN |
Singers Ariana Grande, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Ben Platt, Miley Cyrus, Jennifer Hudson, and Demi Lovato joined student-led marchers in Washington, D.C.[57]
Northeast
In Connecticut, marches were planned in Hartford[58][59] Thousands marched in Stamford.[60]
In Maine, there were demonstrations planned in 15 communities throughout the state,[61] the largest demonstration occurring in the city of Portland,[62] with smaller marches in the cities of Bangor, Orono, Lewiston and Presque Isle.[63]
In Massachusetts, demonstrations were planned in Boston (Boston Common)[64][65] and Cape Ann.[66]
In New Hampshire, marches were planned in Concord[67] and Portsmouth.[68] The Concord event was organized by Eve Caplan, a sophomore at John Stark Regional High School,and another high school student in Plymouth, New Hampshire.[67] Portsmouth's demonstration will take place at Market Square, and was organized Sarah Mae Brown, a leader of The Resistance Seacoast.[68]
In New Jersey, demonstrations took place in Morristown[69] and Somerset County.[70][71]
In New York, demonstrations were planned in Albany, Buffalo, New York City,[72] Rochester (Washington Square Park),[73] Ithaca, and White Plains.[74] Paul McCartney participated in the New York City demonstration and told a CNN journalist, "One of my best friends was killed in gun violence."[75] An estimated 200,000 people marched in NYC.[76]
In Pennsylvania, marches were planned in Scranton,[77] Philadelphia[78] and Pittsburgh.[79][80]
A march was planned in Providence, Rhode Island.[81]
In Vermont, marches were planned to take place in Montpelier,[82] Rutland, Bennington, Middlebury, Manchester, and Putney.[83]
Midwest
In Illinois, demonstrations were planned in Chicago,[84] Glen Ellyn, Springfield,[85] Vernon Hills, and Downers Grove.[86]
A march was planned in Indianapolis, Indiana.[87][88]
Marches were planned in Des Moines and Iowa City, Iowa.[89]
Marches occurred in Detroit,[90] Michigan[91] and Lansing, Michigan[92]
A march was planned in Saint Paul, Minnesota.[93] Marches were planned in Rochester,[94] Grand Marais, Duluth,[95] Aitkin, Karlstad, Ely, Brainerd, Starbuck, Sartell, North Branch, Willmar, Mankato.[citation needed]
In Missouri, marches were planned in Springfield[96] and St. Louis. The St. Louis march was scheduled to begin at 10:00am at Union Station and culminate at the Gateway Arch.[97] Initial estimates anticipate 10,000 attendees.[97]
In North Dakota, marches were planned in Fargo,[98] Bismarck[99] and Minot.[100]
In Ohio, a rally was planned in Cleveland on Public Square,[101][102] and in Cincinnati the events will start at City Hall. Immediately prior to the Cincinnati event, seventeen flutes made from shotgun barrels will be played as a memorial to the victims of the Parkland shooting.[103]
A march was planned in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.[104]
In Wisconsin, marches were planned in Green Bay, La Crosse, Madison, and Milwaukee.[105]
South
A march was planned in Helena, Alabama.[106]
In Florida, demonstrations were planned in Gulf Breeze,[107] Orlando[108] and West Palm Beach.[109] The Orlando march was organized by Florida Resistance, and will be held at Lake Eola Park in downtown Orlando.[108] The city where the school shooting occurred, Parkland, will also have a march.[citation needed]
In Georgia, demonstrations were planned in Atlanta at the Georgia State Capitol,[110] Athens, and Augusta.[111]
A march was planned in Marshall County, Kentucky.[112]
In Louisiana, marches will be held in Baton Rouge, Lafayette, and New Orleans.[citation needed]
Students from Severna Park High School and other Anne Arundel County Public Schools[113] are planning a demonstration to be held at Lawyer's Mall in Annapolis.[114] They invited 188 state legislators. Students, teachers, the Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley, and Moms Demand Action are scheduled to speak.[113] In Baltimore, student members of the Student Activist Association at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute are organizing a march to begin at War Memorial Plaza in front of City Hall and ending near the Inner Harbor.[115][116] The Mayor of Baltimore, Catherine E. Pugh also announced that she was organizing 60 free buses to take students to the demonstrations in Washington, D.C.[115]
Marches were planned in Asheville[117] and Charlotte.[118]
In Oklahoma, marches were planned in Oklahoma City[119] and Tulsa.[119]
In South Carolina, marches were planned in downtown Charleston, Greenville,[citation needed] and Columbia.[120]
In Tennessee, demonstrations were planned in Chattanooga,[citation needed] Knoxville,[citation needed] Memphis,[citation needed] and Nashville.[121]
In Texas, demonstrations were planned in Austin,[122][123] Corpus Christi,[124] Dallas,[125] El Paso, Fort Worth,[126] Houston, and San Antonio. In Corpus Christi, students from W. B. Ray High School will lead a march at 3:00pm in Sherill Veterans Memorial Park.[124]
In Virginia, Richmond Public Schools planned a march to take place at the Virginia State Capitol at 10:00am[127] and a march will be held in downtown Norfolk.[128]
West
A march attended by hundreds of people occurred in Anchorage, Alaska. Marches also took place in Fairbanks, Homer, Juneau and Ketchikan.[129]
In Arizona, marches were planned in Phoenix,[130] Prescott, and Tucson.[131]
In California, marches were planned in Encinitas,[132] Escondido,[133] Fresno,[134] Los Angeles,[135] Orange County,[136] Sacramento,[137] San Diego,[138] San Luis Obispo,[139] San Jose,[140] Oakland,[141] and San Francisco.[142]
In Hawaii, demonstrations were planned in Honolulu,[143] Kahului,[144] and Waimea.[145]
A march was planned in each of the cities of Denver, Colorado;[146] Boise, Idaho;[147] Helena, Montana;[148] and Albuquerque, New Mexico.[149]
In Oregon, marches happened in Corvallis,[150] Bend,[151] Eugene,[152] Salem,[152] Florence,[152] Coos Bay and Portland.[153] The Portland event included a march from the North Park Blocks[citation needed] (Terry Schrunk Plaza was originally the planned starting location) to Pioneer Courthouse Square, where Portugal. The Man performed.[154][155]
In Utah, there are several marches planned including in Logan, Salt Lake City, Park City, Provo, Cedar City and St. George.[156][157]
Marches attended by hundreds took place in Spokane[158] and Yakima, Washington.[159] Thousands marched in Seattle and Bellingham.[160][161]
Puerto Rico
In an official announcement to the state, Governor Ricardo Rosselló announced that he commissioned the Secretary of State, Luis G. Rivera Marín, to begin preparations for the march in San Juan.[162] Rosselló called for all citizens and civic, religious, and private sector organizations to stand united in solidarity for improved gun control.[162] He also remarked that Puerto Rico has the strictest gun control regulations of all jurisdictions in the country.[162] Rivera Marín stated that "our communities need to be a place where our people have peace, not fear."[163] He announced that the march will begin at Condado Lagoon and culminate at the Peace Pavillion in Luis Muñoz Rivera Park.[164]
Outside the United States
Canada
Map
|
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In British Columbia, marches were planned in the Okanagan,[165] Penticton,[166] Vancouver, and Victoria.[167]
Marches are set to take place in Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta.[167]
Students from R.D. Parker Collegiate in Thompson, Manitoba are planning to march.[167]
In Ontario, marches are set to take place in Ottawa,[168] Guelph, Kitchener,[167] Stratford,[169] Toronto,[170] and Waterloo.[171]
In Quebec marches were planned in Montreal, Westmount,[172] Quebec City, and Sherbrooke.[167]
New Brunswick was set to have a march in Fredericton.[167]
Newfoundland planned a march to take place in St. John’s.[167]
Africa
Marches were planned in Accra, Ghana[173] and Mozambique.[174]
Asia
Survivors from the Parkland shooting spoke at the rally in Tel Aviv, Israel, which took place at the U. S. Embassy.[175]
Marches were planned for Hong Kong; Mumbai, India; and Tokyo and Okinawa, Japan.[168]
Europe
Map
|
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Protests were planned in Brussels, Belgium,[176] and Copenhagen, Denmark.[177] In France, events are scheduled to take place in Bordeaux, Toulouse and Paris.[citation needed]
In Germany, protests were planned in Berlin,[178] Hamburg,[178] Frankfurt,[179] Friedrichshafen, Heidelberg, Munich, and Wiesbaden.[180] Events are also scheduled in: Reykjavík, Iceland;[181] Barcelona, Spain;[182] Oslo, Norway;[182] Stockholm, Sweden;[179] and Geneva, Switzerland.[183]
In the United Kingdom, demonstrations are being planned in Belfast[184] and London.[176] In Scotland, relatives of the Dunblane massacre victims joined a demonstration outside the US consulate in Edinburgh.[185]
In Italy a march was planned in Rome.[168]
Oceania
Marches were planned for Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra,[186] and Sydney, Australia.[187]
New Zealand planned marches in Albert Park, Auckland; Parliament House, Wellington; Cathedral Square, Christchurch; and Union Hall at the University of Otago, Dunedin.[188]
South America
In Argentina, a march was planned in Buenos Aires.[168]
Responses
A moment that was praised by attendees and media outlets was Emma González's speech: after briefly speaking and naming the 17 victims, González stood silent for over four minutes, after which a phone alarm went off and she announced that it was the six minute and twenty second point in her speech, equal to the length of the Parkland shooting.[189][190][191] The Washington Post reported that there were many Democrats encouraging the marchers, and many of them, including candidates for office, participated from the sidelines in the march, but few Republicans did similarly.[192]
The White House said in a response that they "applaud the many courageous young Americans exercising their first amendment rights."[193]
Gallery
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Morristown, NJ protests
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Protester and placard
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Student protesters
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Student protesters
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Placard
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Sign for gun control
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Protester holding "Mid-terms matter" sign in New York City
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Protesters in New York City wearing veils, holding pictures of victims of gun violence
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Stoneman Douglas t-shirt and raised fist in Washington, DC
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Roosevelt High School Marchers, Washington, DC
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Students with flag in Washington, DC
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Vietnam Veteran on the steps of the National Archives, Washington, DC
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Duval, FL marchers in Washington, DC
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Veteran marcher flashes support in Washington, DC
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Marchers proceed down Front Street, Philadelphia, PA
See also
References
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Aldrich, Anna Zarra (February 22, 2018). "Connecticut teen organizing Hartford March for Our Lives". The Daily Campus. Archived from the original on February 24, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
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ignored (|url-status=
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- ^ Garber, Megan (March 24, 2018). "The Powerful Silence of the March for Our Lives". The Atlantic. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
- ^ Wiegel, David (March 24, 2018). "Democrats' message at gun-control rallies: Do what the students say". Washington Post.
Democrats' message at gun-control rallies: Do what the students say ... politicians, most of them Democrats, cheered them on ... Democratic leaders from both houses of Congress participated in the marches... There was less praise for the marches from Republicans.... No Republican leader in Congress commented on the March
- ^ Jacobs, Ben (March 24, 2018). "White House 'applauds' historic gun control march but no word from Trump". The Guardian. Retrieved March 25, 2018.
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