Liberals trying to harness activist energy vs. Trump, GOP
Donald Trump’s surprise win in November lit a fire under Carolyn Clow, a county purchasing agent in Madison, Wisconsin. On Saturday, she attended her first in a series of classes on how to run for office.
“If we learn anything as a liberal community, I’d hope that it’s time to stop thinking ‘I’d like to do something,’ and time to take that action,” said Clow, 43, who is running for the village board in her town outside of Madison in the April election with the help of an organization that recruits Democratic women candidates.
“It’s fun and exciting to march and it’s boring to go down to village hall to vote, but we have to learn to do both,” she said.
Trump’s election has sparked what liberal groups say is unprecedented activism. The most visible manifestation of that were protest marches the day after Trump’s inaugural, which drew millions to Washington, D.C., and other locations across the country and overseas. Those were followed by demonstrations at airports and in cities this weekend against Trump’s executive order prohibiting entry into the U.S. by people from seven countries and also limiting refugees.

