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What Women’s March Participants Can Learn From 5 Protests in American History

6 minute read

Correction appended 7:46 p.m.

After millions of people took to the streets on Saturday at the Women’s March on Washington and at associated protests across the globe, they now face a question familiar to any protest movement: What next? What will the diverse coalition of citizens who showed up on Saturday, and the activists who organized the whole thing, do with that energy?

“The deal is that protest matters but not by itself and generally not immediately,” says David S. Meyer, a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and author of The Politics of Protest: Social Movements in America. “Activists get generally much less than they want and it takes a long time to get it, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t matter.”

If activists hope to turn the march into a sustained and successful effort to make change, here are a few moments in the history of American protest that Meyer says can provide some pointers:

What can be learned from the 1913 suffrage parade: The main lesson of women’s movements in the U.S., Meyer says, is that big battles (like suffrage) can take a long time to be won. But what happened after the 1913 suffrage parade, which took demonstrators to D.C. in advance of Woodrow Wilson’s Inauguration, also provides a cautionary tale: as World War I approached, the suffrage movement saw a split between pacifists and those who, though they may have opposed the war, didn’t want to alienate their potential ally in the White House. “The rivalries between various women’s groups wound up being corrosive and difficult,” Meyer says, and he suggests that those women who compromised their own beliefs in order to gain Wilson’s support were likely disappointed, as the President turned out to be a “tepid” ally for the movement. Though activists will likely always debate the costs and benefits of group cohesion vs. individuals speaking their minds, this moment shows that attempting to game the system by sacrificing ideals can backfire.

What can be learned from the Bonus Army: This group of World War I veterans marched on Washington in 1932 to demand early payment of the bonuses they were eventually due. Though they were violently ejected from D.C., they are often given credit for helping to get Franklin Roosevelt elected and their concrete, specific goal of early payment was eventually met, in 1936. The lesson there: make clear demands and stick with them, even at times when it can seem like the movement has failed.

See the Evolution of Protests in Washington

Coxey's Army Marches For The Unemployed
American politician Jacob Coxey leads a group of men on a march from Massillon, Ohio, to Washington, D.C., in protest of unemployment, 1894. Stock Montage—Getty Images
One of the largest armies of unemployed men parade in Washington on bike, wagons and on foot, on the first Labor Day observance, Sept. 3, 1894. Shown are Jacob S. Coxey's "Army of the Commonweal of Christ," with Coxey in the buggy at right, wearing light suit.
One of the largest armies of unemployed men parade in Washington on bike, wagons and on foot, on the first Labor Day observance, Sept. 3, 1894. Shown are Jacob S. Coxey's "Army of the Commonweal of Christ," with Coxey in the buggy at right, wearing light suit. AP Photo
Inez Milholland Boissevain, wearing white cape, seated on white horse at the National American Woman Suffrage Association parade, March 3, 1913, Washington, D.C.
Inez Milholland Boissevain, wearing white cape, seated on white horse at the National American Woman Suffrage Association parade, March 3, 1913, Washington, D.C.Library of Congress
Suffrage parade, March. 3, 1913.
Suffrage parade, March. 3, 1913.Library of Congress
Woman Suffrage Parade held in Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913.
Woman Suffrage Parade held in Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913.Library of Congress
The "Pay The Bonus" sign carried by a group of world war veterans was typical of the banners with which the former soldiers who marched to Washington to press their demands for payments of the soldiers' bonus emphasized their point in the great parade they formed down Pennsylvania Avenue toward the capitol on the evening of June 7, 1932.
The "Pay The Bonus" sign carried by a group of World War veterans was typical of the banners of the former soldiers who marched to Washington to press their demands for payments of the soldiers' bonus. June 7, 1932. AP Photo
Members of the Bonus Expeditionary Forces, many carrying American flags, marching across the east plaza of the U.S. Capitol. April 8, 1932.
Members of the Bonus Expeditionary Forces, many carrying American flags, marching across the east plaza of the U.S. Capitol. April 8, 1932.Library of Congress
Martin Luther King Jr. addresses the crowd during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, August 28, 1963.
Martin Luther King Jr. addresses the crowd during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Aug. 28, 1963.Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
Scene from the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, August 28, 1963.
Scene from the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Aug. 28, 1963.Paul Schutzer—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
Nixon Inauguration Protests 1969.
A group of young Americans attend a protest during the weekend of Richard Nixon's first inauguration, Washington, DC, Jan. 18-21, 1969. David Fenton—Getty Images
Police stand in front of group of antiwar demonstrators lined along Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., Jan. 20, 1973, before the inauguration pf President Richard M. Nixon.
Police stand in front of group of antiwar demonstrators lined along Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., Jan. 20, 1973, before the inauguration pf President Richard M. Nixon. AP Photo
participants in the Million Man March gather on the Washington Monument grounds Monday Oct. 16, 1995. Tens of thousands of black men from across America gathered at the base of the Capitol, and the Mall, in a rally of unity, self-affirmation and protest.
With the Capitol in the background, participants in the Million Man March gather on the Washington Monument grounds Monday Oct. 16, 1995. Charles Tasnadi—AP Photo
West Coast members of the Nation of Islam gather on the Mall in Washington, Monday, Oct. 16, 1995, prior to the start of the Million Man March. Tens of thousands of black men from across America were to gather at the base of the Capitol in a rally of unity, self-affirmation and protest.
West Coast members of the Nation of Islam gather on the Mall in Washington, Monday, Oct. 16, 1995, prior to the start of the Million Man March. Steve Helber—AP Photo
Demonstrators make their feelings known as they crowd along the George W. Bush inauguration parade route 20 January, 2001 in Washington, DC.
Demonstrators make their feelings known as they crowd along the George W. Bush inauguration parade route on Jan. 20, 2001, in Washington, D.C. Don Emmert—AFP/Getty Images
During inaugural ceremonies on Capitol H
During inaugural ceremonies on Capitol Hill, protesters rally against President George W. Bush during a march on Jan. 20, 2005 in Washington, D.C. Oscar H. Mataquin—AFP/Getty Images

What can be learned from the 1963 March on Washington: The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, the occasion for Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, is an example of how protest can help push allies in power to act, Meyer says, as it helped move President John F. Kennedy from being “passively committed to civil rights” to taking an active stance. Turning out big numbers in the street is good, but a successful movement needs allies who can translate that protest into policy or other concrete action. Perhaps as important, the idea of African Americans marching on Washington for their rights dated all the way back to the early 1940s, another example of the importance of seeing things in long view.

What can be learned from the 1982 nuclear-freeze demonstration: The massive antinuclear demonstration held in New York City in the summer of 1982 is in some ways the opposite of 1963, says Meyer, in that it shows what a movement can accomplish when those in power are not allies. At the time, President Ronald Reagan was firmly opposed to the idea of a nuclear freeze, though arms-reduction talks resumed only days after the protest and Reagan was seen by some to begin taking a softer stance toward Cold War foreign relations. (“The coincidence in time is striking,” Meyer notes.) A lesson there is to remember that opposition leaders will rarely credit demonstrators with changing things, even if a protest helps show that it’s “politically impossible” to continue down an old route.

On the other hand, the antinuclear movement failed to successfully define its boundaries, which can hurt a movement’s ability to persist and measure success. “The Reagan Administration said, yeah, nobody wants a nuclear war and we don’t either,” Meyer says. “The sharper you can be, the harder it is to be co-opted.”

What can be learned from Hands Across America: This 1986 “megaevent” (not quite a protest, but still a large public demonstration) in which Americans across the country held hands to raise money to combat hunger is an example of what Meyer calls “mushy consensus.” That’s the problem of having a goal that everybody likes but is way too vague. “It’s like, ‘We’re all going to care,'” he says. Objections are necessarily few, which means a huge coalition can get behind the idea and the onetime involvement is great, but how do you turn that into a movement or measure long-term success? Protest movements are much more successful at creating change when they are “willing to make enemies and create targets.”

From these five moments, three main ingredients for success stand out: “Clarity, persistence and allies.”

So where does that leave the Women’s March?

Despite the broad coalition the protest brought together, organizers showed clarity by having issued a platform and rejected groups that were not in line with those ideals. And, perhaps paradoxically, Meyer predicts that activists will benefit from having Donald Trump and his Administration help set the agenda by providing, with their actions, a focal point for resistance. And, though it will be hard to cultivate powerful allies in the current federal government, he believes that legislators might swing on some issues — and there is little chance that the new movement will prove too deferential to potential allies in power. What remains to be seen is whether the weekend’s marchers can persist.

“What we can see from the outside,” says Meyer, “is actually really promising.”

Correction: The original version of this article misstated the date of the Hands Across America event. It took place in 1986.

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Write to Lily Rothman at lily.rothman@time.com