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Anti-Trump protesters gather at Washington and other US cities

On Saturday, organizers plan to hold 1,200 protests across the U.S. in what they expect will be the biggest single day of demonstrations against President Donald Trump.

As the protests began, thousands of people flooded into Washington under gray skies and light rain. The organizers said that they expected more than 20,000 to attend the rally on the National Mall.

Trump opponents will be able to show their displeasure in mass at Trump's executive orders.

According to the website, 150 activist groups are expected to attend. The protests will take place in all 50 US states, plus Canada and Mexico.

Protesters lined the busy Connecticut Avenue in Washington, D.C., waiting for buses that would take them downtown. Signs with slogans like "No Kings in USA" and "Deport Musk" were displayed.

Terry Klein, retired biomedical researcher from Princeton, New Jersey was one of hundreds who gathered in the early morning hours below the Washington Monument.

She drove down from New York to protest Trump's policies "on everything, from immigration to DOGE stuff this week to tariffs to education." "Our whole country, all our institutions, and all that makes America what it's known as, is under attack."

David Madden, 75, an Army veteran and retired lawyer, flew to Dayton, Ohio from Dayton to protest "the injustice which is dominating this nation, the institutions being stolen from the American public, the confusion in courts, and the fact that our population is, I believe, essentially racist."

Musk's Department of Government Efficiency, with Trump's blessings, has scythed the U.S. Government, eliminating over 200,000 jobs out of the 2.3 Million federal workforce. The effort was sometimes haphazard, and required the recall of specialists.

The Internal Revenue Service has begun laying off over 20,000 employees, or up to 25% of their ranks, on Friday.

On Saturday, several hundred people protested outside the Social Security Administration headquarters, which is a DOGE top target near Baltimore, against the cuts made to this agency that provides benefits for the elderly and the disabled.

After the recent announcements by the agency that it would be cutting 7,000 employees and ending phone services for millions of claimants, the mood was defiant and angry.

DOGE members have been in the building for several weeks. The majority of retirees in the crowd held signs that read "Where Has My Country Go? ", "FIRE DOE!", "Send Musk To Mars" and "Hands Off Social Security!"

Linda Falcao who will be 65 in just two months told the crowd that she has been paying into her Social Security fund ever since the age 16.

She said, "I am terrified, angry, pissed and bewildered that this could happen in the United States." "I love America, and I am heartbroken. I want my money. I need my money. "I want my money!"

The crowd responded by chanting, "It is our money!"

Liz Huston, the White House's assistant press secretary, denied that Trump intended to cut Social Security or Medicaid.

"President Trump is very clear in his position: He will protect Social Security and Medicare for all eligible beneficiaries. Huston wrote in an email that the Democrats' position is to give Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare benefits illegal aliens. This will bankrupt and crush American seniors.

Many of Trump's plans have been stymied by lawsuits that claim he overstepped his powers in firing civil servants, deporting immigrants and reversing transgender rights.

Trump returned to the White House on January 20th with a series of executive orders, and other measures that critics claim are in line with Project 2025. Project 2025 is a conservative political initiative aimed at reshaping government and consolidating presidential authority. Trump's supporters applauded his audacity, saying it was necessary to disrupt liberal interests.

Before the US protests began, hundreds of anti Trump Americans in Europe met in Berlin, Frankfurt and Paris to express their opposition to Trump's radical changes to U.S. domestic and foreign policies.

Around 200 people gathered in Paris, mostly Americans, on the Place de la Republique to listen to speeches. They also waved banners that included "Feminists for Freedom Not Fascism", "Rule of Law", and "Save Democracy".

Timothy Kautz, spokesperson for Democrats Abroad in Frankfurt, said: "We must show solidarity with the thousands of demonstrations that are taking place today in the USA." Jose Sanchez, a protester from Frankfurt, said that Trump is a conman who destroys the U.S. democratic system. Jonathan Landay in Washington and Tim Reid reporting. Additional reporting by Daniel Trotta, John Irish, Emma-Victoria Farr and Christian Mang in Berlin and Frankfurt, Sarah Young, and Sarah Young, in London. James Oliphant (Writing; editing by Frank McGurty Topra Alistair Bell and Toby Chopra)

(source: Reuters)