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topicnews · July 17, 2025

Why are the good protests on Thursday?

Why are the good protests on Thursday?



The good protests that were planned nationwide on July 17th received their name from Rep. John Lewis and mark the fifth anniversary of his death.

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Tens of thousands of demonstrators are expected to be gathered nationwide at more than 1,600 locations on July 17 to gather against many of the policy of the Trump government.

The name for the good difficulties lives in protests from an expression that was usually used by the late MP John Lewis, a civil rights icon, which insisted that it was important to get involved in “good trouble, necessary trouble” in order to achieve a positive social change.

Lewis, who was often referred to as the “moral compass” of the house, was one of the volume critics of the first government of President Donald Trump. The protests are planned for the fifth anniversary of the death of Lewis.

The organizers asked the public against the attitude of the Trump government to women's rights, the reduction of the security network programs, the treatment of immigrants and the use of the National Guard in order to suppress largely peaceful protests in California.

Celina Stewart, Chief Executive Officer of the League of Voters, one of the organizational groups, said Trump rules through fear, the silence of opposition and dissent. Instead, the Americans should join together and embody Lewis' ideals of social justice and activism, she said.

“What would he encourage us at that moment?” Asked Stewart. “It will look different for all of us, but I know that we can all do something and many of us can do a lot of things.”

The White House said Trump delivered what he said he would do it.

“Almost 80 million Americans have given President Trump a historical mandate to make America great again, and he gives this promise in record time,” said spokeswoman for the White House, Liz Huston.

“Be” serve “from your community”

Many of the interest groups that planned the upcoming protest were also involved in the nationwide demonstrations “No Kings” on June 14, which according to the group of the group employed millions of participants at 2,100 locations. Overall, there have been monthly nationwide protests against the government's politics since April.

The flagship will take place in Chicago this time, with further great peaceful protests for Atlanta, St. Louis, Annapolis, Maryland and Washington. DC Hundreds of small events are expected in cities across the country. Some international protests are planned.

Together with protests and marches, some groups will hold “moral gatherings” in statuses and federal buildings, food drives, courses, voter registration drives and other events in the municipal building, said Allison Pulliam, co-director of one of the organizational groups, explaining the American coalition of American democracy.

“People appear in their communities in the way they have led to appearing, and that was exactly what the Member of the congress meant Lewis when he said about good difficulties: ways to serve their community,” she said.

Why on a Thursday?

Instead of organizing the nationwide protests on a Saturday how the interest groups mostly deny this year, the organizers decided to hold the events on the fifth anniversary of Lewis' death, even though it falls on a Thursday.

Daryl Jones, the Co-Leader of the Transformative Justice Coalition, said the organizers had the permission of the von Lewis family to use its name with the protests. They asked that it would not be a dark opportunity, but one that would take his job.

Many of the protests should take place after the end of the working day to increase participation. Some are also planned early in the morning.

The organizers said they were not worried that a protest on Thursday would mean less voter turnout.

“This is the largest one-day voting rights (and) civil rights movement measures in all 50 states and internationally in US history and the largest weekday lawsuit this year,” said Barbara Arnwine, another co-manager of the transformative judicial coalition. “People are happy to gather in a solemn protest.”

Big and small events

This day of action follows the model representative groups that have been used since spring and organizes events in as many places as possible and not in one or two capitals.

The approach can be more difficult for the public to ignore themselves, and enables people to contact local resources and carry out local interest groups, the organizers said instead of taking part in a single big event and not knowing what to do next.

Palm Beach County, Florida, where Trump's estate is in Mar-Lago, will be five events, including a March, a car carade and speaker who talk about Lewis' legacy.

In Yonkers, New York, the local NAACP and indivisible chapters have teamed up to organize an event in Van der Donck Park near the train station and the library. You expect at least 200 people to take part.

“The idea is to make a little noise,” said Eileen O'Connor, the co -founder of the NYCD 16/15 indivisible group.

Kisha Skipper, President of the Naacp-Yonkers Branch No. 2188, and the effort to hire younger people, is Kisha Skipper, President of the NAACP-YONKERS industry, the event to facilitate the event during the week and after work, and make the event easier. Lewis became a lawyer during his studies and organized SIT-IN of the midday counter in Nashville.

Together with bladder, sidewalk and shield production stations, the event will also include the training and registration information of the voters, said Skipper.

In Annapolis, seven local organizations worked together to put together a march over two local bridges.

“We march across the bridges to symbolize John Lewis' march about the Edmund Pettus Bridge,” said Lynda Davis, one of the organizers who appeared for the racial justice of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County. “We still march to civil and human rights like him, and we will continue to march until we get civil and human rights.”