Women's March goes on amid anti-Semitism charges
Published on January 20, 2019 at 03:51AM by Samantha Schmidt, DeNeen L. Brown, Morgan Smith and Justin Jouvenal, The Washington Post
WASHINGTON - Thousands of women are expected in the nation's capital Saturday for the third annual Women's March on Washington. Organizers wrote in a permit application weeks ago that they expected hundreds of thousands to attend - a number similar to the 2017 march the day after Donald Trump's inauguration - but a National Park Service permit issued Thursday indicated that about 10,000 are expected. The 2019 march is taking place amid controversies that have dogged the national Women's March organization, including allegations of anti-Semitism and secretive financial dealings and disputes over who gets to own and define the Women's March. Some organizers have called for its national co-chairs to resign.
Published on January 20, 2019 at 03:51AM by Samantha Schmidt, DeNeen L. Brown, Morgan Smith and Justin Jouvenal, The Washington Post
WASHINGTON - Thousands of women are expected in the nation's capital Saturday for the third annual Women's March on Washington. Organizers wrote in a permit application weeks ago that they expected hundreds of thousands to attend - a number similar to the 2017 march the day after Donald Trump's inauguration - but a National Park Service permit issued Thursday indicated that about 10,000 are expected. The 2019 march is taking place amid controversies that have dogged the national Women's March organization, including allegations of anti-Semitism and secretive financial dealings and disputes over who gets to own and define the Women's March. Some organizers have called for its national co-chairs to resign.
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