7 Ways to Rise Up Against Trumpism 2.0

7 Ways to Rise Up Against Trumpism 2.0
📅 2025-03-15

Since Donald Trump’s second term began on Jan. 20, 2025, his administration has aggressively launched a deluge of multipronged attacks on immigrants, transgender people, racial equity initiatives, federal workers, climate regulations, and more. “It is a fire hose right now,” Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) told the Associated Press. “That’s what he does. He creates a ton of chaos so it’s hard to keep up with it.” 

In other words, overloading us so we don’t know where to begin is the point. 

But the good news is people are fighting back with every tool at their disposal, from trainings and legal challenges to walkouts and strikes. Here is a non-comprehensive list of ways people across the United States are rising up against Trumpism. 

On Feb, 5, 2025, students gathered outside of city hall in Los Angeles to protest Donald Trump and his anti-immigration stance as part of a national protest. Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP

1. Immigrant Rights

“Know Your Rights” trainings are one of the most effective ways to counter Trump’s promised ICE raids against undocumented people and those suspected to be undocumented. Large networks such as the National Day Laborer Organizing Network and smaller local groups such as Empowering Marginalized Asian Communities (EMAC) in Stockton, California, are educating local communities about what their rights are in the event of raids by federal immigration officials. EMAC’s Anti-Deportation Tool Kit is available in numerous South East Asian languages as well as in Spanish.

Groups such as the Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice in Southern California are also using social media to spread awareness of people’s rights, share ways to report ICE raids on a hotline, and learn how to identify different federal law-enforcement vehicles.

Additionally, students from immigrant and mixed-status families are flexing their grassroots power by leading walkouts at colleges and K-12 schools in protest of ICE raids.

After Trump’s executive order on Jan. 28, 2025, that restricted gender transition procedures for people under the age of 19 and a local hospital cancelled scheduled appointments, hundreds demonstrated in protest in New York City on Feb. 3, 2025. Photo by Charly Triballeau / AFP

2. Transgender Rights

Trump’s attacks against transgender people include an executive order that bans gender-affirming care for minors. This has caused chaos for those seeking care, as numerous hospitals and providers have abruptly stopped treatments. In response, advocacy organizations GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing LGBTQ+ Equality and PFLAG have joined forces to launch a federal legal challenge against the administration. 

Some doctors are heroically providing care to their patients in the face of Trump’s ban, promising to continue until they are forced to stop. And State Attorney General of New York Letitia James issued an order for providers in New York to continue necessary care in line with state laws. 

Meanwhile, transgender-led media outlets such as Translash as well as individual journalists are rewriting narratives on trans rights.  

On Feb. 14, 2025, demonstrators gathered outside of the offices of the Department of Health and Human Services in Washington, D.C., to protest against Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency budget cuts and employee terminations. Photo by Bryan Dozier / Middle East Images / Middle East Images via AFP

3. Workers Rights

Though labor unions are very popular among people in the United States, the Trump administration is still firing federal workers en masse and hamstringing the National Labor Relations Board, which became a bulwark against corporate resistance to unions under the Biden administration. In response to these actions, the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents more than 800,000 federal workers, has legally challenged Trump’s moves. 

Labor rights activists are also working at the state level to push attorneys general and governors to step in and fortify already existing protections. Additionally, workers at Amazon and Starbucks launched strikes in December 2024, in anticipation of Trump’s anti-labor stance. And unions are slowly changing the way they organize rank-and-file workers, making their institutions less hierarchical and more responsive to worker needs and concerns. According to labor writer Eric Blanc, that reorganization can make unions more resilient in the face of Trump’s anti-labor policies.

Shortly after the November 2024 election, abortion rights activists and Women’s March protesters gathered outside the offices of the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank that published Project 2025. Photo by Probal Rashid/LightRocket via Getty Images

4. Reproductive Rights

Newly confirmed Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has sparked deep concern among medical professionals because of his anti-vaccine stances and conspiracy theories on health. And, as Trump solidified his anti-abortion stance, Kennedy appears to have fallen in line. 

But access to abortion procedures remains popular throughout the nation, so much so that seven states passed ballot measures last November protecting abortion care, three of which voted for Trump. 

Meanwhile, state governors are also intervening to protect abortion access. North Carolina Governor Josh Stein has moved to ensure his state will not allow federal enforcement of abortion restrictions, and New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy announced his state will begin stockpiling mifepristone, which can be used to induce abortion.

The Abortion Defense Network is offering legal support for abortion providers and the National Abortion Federation has a hotline for those needing abortion care. Individuals have also begun stockpiling abortion pills, obtaining them from groups such as Aid Access and Plan C.

During the People’s March in Washington, D.C., held January 18, 2025, protesters held signs advocating for racial justice and intersectionality. Photo by Bryan Dozier / Middle East Images / Middle East Images via AF

5. Racial Justice and Equity

One of Trump’s most high-profile actions has been banning diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives in the federal government and threatening private institutions to not implement such programs. Under his purview, the Department of Education has dismantled its DEI programs.

In response, a coalition of DEI advocates, including the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education, has filed a lawsuit against the administration, saying the DEI bans are vague and unconstitutional. The ACLU has also taken similar legal action. 

While some schools and faculty are complying with Trump’s orders, others are holding firm and resisting. A network of community college leaders called Education for All is going further by educating its members on how to resist the DEI bans. 

As private corporations like Target have announced they will roll back DEI programs, many others plan to preserve them. Some consumers say they will participate in a one-day boycott on Feb. 28, in protest of corporate DEI rollbacks.

Just over a week before the inauguration of Donald Trump, climate activists gathered outside the U.S. embassy in London in solidarity with people on the frontline of the climate crisis. Photo by Mark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images

6. Climate Justice

The Trump administration pulled back on the United States’ global climate commitments while also launching an immediate and massive rollback of funding for climate and environmental initiatives, especially those aimed at assisting Black and Brown communities. 

Large environmental organizations such as the Center for Biological Diversity and the Natural Resources Defense Council have already planned legal challenges to Trump’s actions. These organizations have a track record of winning a majority of such cases during Trump’s first term. States like California are doing the same. 

Environmental leaders are also vowing to fight back and climate activists are promising disruptive, though peaceful, actions. 

On Feb. 5, 2025, protesters gathered at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul, Minnesota. Photo by Nick Wosika/Icon Sportswire

7. General Strike

Americans are angry about Trump’s slash-and-burn approach to government. They’re so enraged, in fact, that millions have been making phone calls to their Congressional representatives, crippling phone lines. Unfortunately the opposition party is, in the words of The Nation’s Chris Lehmann, “floundering.”

In such a political vacuum, a grassroots effort has launched a general strike that is gaining traction. Based on research showing that 3.5% of a nation’s population striking from work can force leaders to meet their demands, the effort is calling on people to make a pledge to strike by signing strike cards. 

As of this writing, more than 200,000 people have signed strike pledges. The goal is 11 million people.

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