“On the evening of election night, after saying, ‘Hey, I’m going to vote and I’m going to get my friends to vote,’ I sat on the sofa bawling trying to figure out what to say to my daughters the next morning because they went to bed certain that Hillary was going to win.”

“Marching is my way of putting my money where my mouth is as far as being an active citizen.”

“I want my daughters to have agency and have control over their bodies and feel comfortable in the country that they are in so this is my way of saying, ‘Hey everybody, I agree with all the people who are out here for different reasons and we don’t agree with what is happening right now and we are taking a stand.’”

_____

Who She Is: Garvey Mortley, 8, of Bethesda, Md., is Ms. Coleman’s granddaughter

Backstory: Third grader; was named after Marcus Garvey

“I think it’s good to share the moment with them and help protest Donald Trump because we want to stand up for our rights because a long time ago, lots of women could not vote. Now we can vote and protest people and stuff.”

“If he affects the world in a bad way — like I have lots of friends from different countries and he could make them all move away … that makes me mad because all the people from the civil rights movement had a hard time trying to put us together. It’s like a puzzle, all these people came together, piece by piece, and now Donald Trump is coming over and just breaking those puzzle pieces.”