Crowds nationwide protest Trump's move to dismiss Sessions as attorney general

The Washington Post. Tens of thousands of protesters nationwide spent Thursday evening decrying President Donald Trump's removal of Jeff Sessions as U.S. attorney general, a move they fear threatens the independence of special counsel Robert Mueller III's investigation.
Those gathered in cities and towns from Boston to Houston to Seattle said Trump "crossed a red line" when he picked Matthew Whitaker as acting attorney general after asking and receiving Sessions's resignation on Wednesday. Whitaker, a political loyalist, had criticized the special counsel's probe into possible collusion between Russia and Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.
The progressive group MoveOn.org organized what it said were hundreds of protest events, held at 5 p.m. local time outside city halls and federal courthouses, in parks and on downtown streets and university grounds.

This is how some of the protests looked and sounded across the country.

Boston
With the Massachusetts State House as a backdrop, several thousand people loudly voiced their disapproval of Sessions being forced out. "Enough is enough," they chanted, and "Hands Off Robert Mueller." Formal speakers were nearly drowned out by the three television news helicopters hovering over the hour-long rally.
People held home-made signs with messages such as "President, not King" and "Not above the law." A very unofficial survey suggested that many had made a special trip into central Boston for the rally, rather than happening upon it as they left work.
Some of the protesters, including John Pitkin of Cambridge, Massachusetts, referenced the so-called Saturday Night Massacre during the Watergate scandal, when then-president Richard Nixon ordered his attorney general to fire the special prosecutor who was investigating him. "It was people who forced Nixon to back off," Pitkin said. "We have to do it again."
Katherine Sigel of Belmont said she and her husband brought their children, ages 7 and 9, to show them that some things are worth fighting for. "I want my kids to see that this is not what we accept," she said.
Sean Going of Medford, Massachusetts, carried a home-made sign and attended the protest with his wife Lisa. "We've normalized this dystopia too much," he said.
Lisa Going said she thought the rallies were mostly to buoy the spirit of protesters and wouldn't have much effect on the Trump administration. But she still feels that protesting - which she'd never done until two years ago - is important. "Trump turned us into protesters in our 50s," she said.

- Karen Weintraub
New York
        
Protesters mingled with tourists in Times Square as the sun set in the late afternoon and the glow of huge electronic billboards instead illuminated the scene.
"Our America, Not Trump's America," one sign read. Some people wore shirts emblazoned with the words "Rise and Resist."
By 6:30 p.m., the number had swollen to several thousand people. The protesters chanted exuberantly amid a cacophony of car and taxi horns even louder than usual -- since traffic was blocked on cross streets.
"The only reason Trump named Whitaker as attorney general was to muck up the Mueller investigation," said Fran Haselkorn of Manhattan. "I'm scandalized by the man in the White House."
Some out-of-towners joined the demonstration, which then marched south to Union Square and speakers.
Jay Sheen, a retired lawyer, said he does not get many opportunities to protest the president in his hometown of Salt Lake City. "Utah is a deep red state," he said. "I believe in the rule of law, and Trump is trying to destroy that."

- Vera Haller
Washington, D.C. 

In Lafayette Park across from the White House, several protesters in the crowd of several hundred held letters spelling out "Save Mueller" in white lights. They called for the acting attorney general to recuse himself from any involvement in the special counsel's investigation.
Walter Schaub, the former director of the federal Office of Government Ethics, told those gathered that "we are in a full-blown constitutional crisis, and we are here because Donald Trump thinks he is above the law. What's at stake is nothing less than the rule of law and the integrity of our republic. Mueller must be protected, so let's demand it now."

- Clarence Williams
Chicago
Downtown's Federal Plaza was the scene where 4,000 protesters came on a raw, wet evening. That included Senate Minority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill.
As an inflatable "Baby Trump" looked on, Durbin told the crowd that "we must hold this president accountable and not let him interfere with Mueller's investigation." Trump's decision to replace Sessions immediately after the midterm elections was "significant," he said.
After about 40 minutes, the protest turned into a march. It went only about five blocks - to Trump Tower.

- Mark Guarino
Seattle
People here worried by Trump's action on Sessions kicked off their rally at a park named for Washington state's first openly gay legislator, Cal Anderson. Organizers said about 10,000 people had registered. As the event in the park turned into a march to the H. M. Jackson Federal building downtown, the few hundred demonstrators ultimately were joined by a few thousand.

"Recuse" urged one person's sign.
Sarah Erickson and her husband, Chris Rogers, who are originally from California's conservative Central Valley, came with their 2-year-old son, Halliday.
They echoed the sentiments shared by many at the rally. Though feeling some relief from Tuesday's election results that returned control of the House to Democrats, people said the chaos within the Justice Department and the threat to the Mueller investigation remain deeply disturbing. "We wanted to be here to show that people are watching... we have to remain vigilant and be ready," Erickson said.
Retired nurse Gail Sanderson was at her fifth rally - all of them since Trump's election. The election outcome gave her hope for the investigation's future, she said. "I see the democratic process working now," she said.
Gov. Jay Inslee, D, showed up to speak. So did Noah Eden, former branch chief of the National Counterterrorism Center, and Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Seattle Democrat who sits on the House Judiciary Committee.
"This president thought that we marched to the polls on Tuesday, took back the majority of the House, that somehow we'd be a little tired and he could squeak in a little constitutional crisis on us," Jayapal said. "But we have a message for him: We are never too tired to stand up for our Constitution."

- Lornet Turnbull