Women in U.S. plan to stay off the job, rally in anti-Trump protests

JORGE ADORNO—Reuters
A woman takes a selfie during a protest in front of the Health Ministry to demand the end of violence against women and better health care for women during"International Women's Day"

NEW YORK – Demonstrations in countries around the world are underway Wednesday as women gather to bring attention to International Women’s Day. In the United States political organizers have called for women to stay off the job and stage demonstrations across the country. Chapel Hill Carrboro Schools are among those school districts across the nation that had to close Wednesday due to the high number of employee absences.On “A Day Without a Woman,” organizers say that those who are able to do so will stay away from work or school, much as immigrants did on Feb. 16 to protest Trump’s immigration policies. Both protests are part of the series of anti-Trump demonstrations that have taken place since the day after his Nov. 8 election. Objectives of Wednesday’s events include calling attention to the gender pay gap in which women trail men, and abortion rights.”For years and years, March 8 has been International Women’s Day, and it has been a happy, happy day, which is fine,” said Terry O’Neill, president of the National Organization for Women. “But the political climate that we find ourselves in right now requires us to have political power.”Demonstrations will target a Trump order that bars foreign health providers receiving U.S. funds from raising abortion as an option, O’Neill said.American women on average earn 79 cents for every $1 that men make, and African-American and Latina women make even less, O’Neill said. Since women account for two-thirds of all minimum wage workers, lifting the hourly wage would significantly narrow the pay gap, she said.The minimum wage has been $7.25 at the federal level since 2009, although it is higher in some states.Organizers are attempting to repeat tactics from the Jan. 21 women’s march on Washington and other cities that came together largely through social media.Women make up 47 percent of the U.S. civilian labor force. If all of them stayed out of work for the day, it would knock almost $21 billion of the country’s gross domestic product, the liberal leaning Center for American Progress estimated.Organizers, however, realize that many women don’t want to participate or cannot afford to take a day off and are urging women to limit their shopping to female-owned businesses or to wear red.Rallies are planned in cities across the country, including Washington, New York, Atlanta, St. Petersburg, Florida, Chicago, San Francisco and Berkeley, California.