By Dave Collins
The Associated Press
Crowds of people angry about the way President Donald Trump is running the country marched and rallied in scores of American cities April 5 in the biggest day of demonstrations yet by an opposition movement trying to regain its momentum after the shock of the Republicanโs first weeks in office.

So-called Hands Off! demonstrations were organized for more than 1,200 locations in all 50 states by more than 150 groups including civil rights organizations, labor unions, LBGTQ+ advocates, veterans and elections activists. The rallies appeared peaceful, with no immediate reports of arrests.
From the National Mall and Midtown Manhattan to Boston Common and multiple state capitols, thousands of protesters assailed Trump and billionaire Elon Musk โs actions on government downsizing, the economy, immigration and human rights. In Seattle, in the shadow of the cityโs iconic Space Needle, protesters held signs with slogans like โFight the oligarchy.โ
Demonstrators voiced anger over the administrationโs moves to fire thousands of federal workers, close Social Security Administration field offices, effectively shutter entire agencies, deport immigrants, scale back protections for transgender people and cut funding for health programs.
Musk, a Trump adviser who runs Tesla, SpaceX and the social media platform X, has played a key role in the downsizing as the head of the newly created Department of Government Efficiency. He says he is saving taxpayers billions of dollars.
Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign advocacy group, criticized the administrationโs treatment of the LBGTQ+ community at the rally at the National Mall, where Democratic members of Congress also took the stage.
โThe attacks that weโre seeing, theyโre not just political. They are personal, yโall,โ Robinson said. โTheyโre trying to ban our books, theyโre slashing HIV prevention funding, theyโre criminalizing our doctors, our teachers, our families and our lives.โ
โWe donโt want this America, yโall,โ Robinson added. โWe want the America we deserve, where dignity, safety and freedom belong not to some of us, but to all of us.โ
In Boston, demonstrators brandished signs such as โHands off our democracyโ and โHands off our Social Security.โ
Mayor Michelle Wu said she does not want her children and othersโ to live in a world in which threats and intimidation are government tactics and values like diversity and equality are under attack.

โI refuse to accept that they could grow up in a world where immigrants like their grandma and grandpa are automatically presumed to be criminals,โ Wu said.
Roger Broom, 66, a retiree from Delaware County, Ohio, was one of hundreds who rallied at the Statehouse in Columbus. He said he used to be a Reagan Republican but has been turned off by Trump.
โHeโs tearing this country apart,โ Broom said. โItโs just an administration of grievances.โ
Hundreds of people also demonstrated in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, a few miles from Trumpโs golf course in Jupiter, where he spent the morning at the clubโs Senior Club Championship. People lined both sides of PGA Drive, encouraging cars to honk and chanting slogans against Trump.
โThey need to keep their hands off of our Social Security,โ said Archer Moran of Port St. Lucie, Florida.
โThe list of what they need to keep their hands off of is too long,โ Moran said. โAnd itโs amazing how soon these protests are happening since heโs taken office.โ
The president planned to go golfing again April 6, according to the White House.
Asked about the protests, the White House said in a statement that โPresident Trumpโs position is clear: he will always protect Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid for eligible beneficiaries. Meanwhile, the Democratsโ stance is giving Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare benefits to illegal aliens, which will bankrupt these programs and crush American seniors.โ
Activists have staged nationwide demonstrations against Trump and Musk multiple times since Trump returned to office. But before April 5 the opposition movement had yet to produce a mass mobilization like the Womenโs March in 2017, which brought thousands of women to Washington after Trumpโs first inauguration, or the Black Lives Matter demonstrations that erupted in multiple cities after George Floydโs killing by police in Minneapolis in 2020.
In Charlotte, North Carolina, protesters said they were supporting a variety of causes, from Social Security and education to immigration and womenโs reproductive rights.
โRegardless of your party, regardless of who you voted for, whatโs going on today, whatโs happening today is abhorrent,โ said Britt Castillo, 35, of Charlotte. โItโs disgusting, and as broken as our current system might be, the way that the current administration is going about trying to fix things โ it is not the way to do it. Theyโre not listening to the people.โ
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Associated Press journalists Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio, Fatima Hussein in West Palm Beach, Florida, and Erik Verduzco in Charlotte, North Carolina, contributed.

