However the organisation carried on. In 2018, Ladies’s March leaders helped rally towards Trump’s Supreme Courtroom nominee Brett Kavanaugh as he confronted questions on allegations of sexual assault.
Then, in 2020, they held a vigil for the late Supreme Courtroom Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who was identified for her work on gender equality.
And in 2022, when the Supreme Courtroom finally did overturn the federal proper to abortion, Ladies’s March organisers launched a “summer season of rage”, with protests from coast to coast.
However the group has additionally continued to climate controversies about its membership.
In 2018, as an illustration, a founding member alleged she was pushed out of her management position over her Jewish religion. The outcry over anti-Semitism led different leaders to step down. Critics additionally accused the group of sidelining folks of color and whitewashing feminism.
By 2019, the motion noticed a lot smaller numbers than at its earlier yearly marches, leaving some attendees disenchanted.
The organisation has since introduced on new management corresponding to Tamika Middleton, its managing director since 2021. She acknowledges that the organisation has needed to evolve to maintain up with the occasions.
“I feel we’re at all times in studying, and I feel we’re at all times in apply, proper?” she mentioned. “Our values do not at all times land in our apply within the ways in which we intend them to.”
Middleton, who describes herself as a part of “a southern Black radical custom”, instructed Al Jazeera that this yr’s annual protest — dubbed the Folks’s March — won’t attempt to recreate the mass momentum of 2017.
As a substitute, she hopes that Tuesday’s Folks’s March will convey collectively a broader coalition of activists fascinated with advancing the rights of immigrants, LGBTQ+ folks and the poor, in addition to ladies.
“We’re recognising the connection between all of those battles and that there’s a menace, there’s opposition that’s past Trump,” Middleton mentioned.
The shifting developments throughout the motion have been on show final November when the Ladies’s March helped organise an impromptu protest outdoors the Heritage Basis, a conservative suppose tank.
It was the weekend after the 2024 election, and Middleton observed a distinction in how the protesters have been reacting to Trump’s most up-to-date victory.
“When Trump was elected the primary time, there was form of this type of outrage that actually grew, actually shortly,” she defined. “And this time what we noticed, sure, we noticed some outrage. We additionally noticed frustration, we noticed disappointment, we noticed grief. We noticed quite a lot of unhappiness.”

For Marie, the activist who attended the 2017 march in San Francisco, the final 4 years beneath Democratic President Joe Biden have additionally contributed to a change in public temper.
Beneath Biden, the US continued to offer unconditional army support to its ally Israel — even whereas the Center Japanese nation waged a devastating 15-month warfare on Gaza, killing greater than 46,800 Palestinians. United Nations experts have discovered Israel’s ways within the enclave to be “according to genocide”.
Marie defined she sees latest occasions as a part of a “legacy of violence” that extends past occasion traces.
“Trump shouldn’t be the bogeyman,” mentioned Marie. “It is a nation that prioritises bombs, and particularly bombing kids over educating them.”
Political change, she added, requires extra sustained activism than what a single yearly protest can present.
“The motion it takes to shift that authorities shouldn’t be a few hours on a Saturday with a few indicators,” Marie mentioned. “We’ve left the area of cutesy protest.”