Trump, protest and Oregon
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OregonLive.com |
Dozens of coordinated protests against the Trump administration are happening across Oregon Saturday, including several in the Portland metro area.
Yahoo |
Protests were held in multiple Pittsburgh-area counties as part of the national “Hands Off” movement.
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Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield filed three lawsuits against the Trump administration on Friday, bringing the total number to 12.
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KOIN on MSNThousands in PNW march in anti-Trump ‘Hands Off’ rallyOpponents of President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk plan to rally across the U.S. on Saturday to protest the administration’s actions on government downsizing, the economy, human rights and other issues.
Ironically enough, it may have taken the re-election of President Donald J. Trump for the residents of one of America’s most famously liberal cities to fall back in love — or at least like — with their hometown.
Outside of Portland, protests drew hundreds of people in Tigard, Madras, Pendleton, Medford and elsewhere across Oregon on Saturday, as part of the national “Hands Off” day of action.
To break down the economic impacts of the new tariffs here in Oregon, KATU’s Deb Knapp interviewed state economist Carl Riccadonna on Wednesday evening. You can watch it below or read a lightly edited version of it. KNAPP: Let's start with your reaction to the tariffs announced today.
Specifically, U.S. President Donald J. Trump’s name is carved onto two of the clay-fired red bricks comprising downtown Portland’s iconic Pioneer Courthouse Square. Both bricks — one with a period after Trump’s middle initial, the other lacking such punctuation — have been around since 2017, the same year as Trump’s first inauguration.
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Protesters have taken to the streets of cities across the globe, including London, Brussels, Washington, and Portland, over President Donald Trump and Elon Musk
The state's largest company, Nike, saw its price plummet as much as 13% in the first hour of trading Thursday.
A bill before the Oregon Legislature would attempt to take a stand against President Donald Trump’s national crackdown on immigrants by penalizing local employers who call or threaten to summon federal deportation authorities.