Demonstrators planned to gather again on Saturday in cities across the US to protest against president-elect Donald Trump, who they say will threaten their civil and human rights, a day after a protester was shot in Portland, Oregon.
Rallies were scheduled throughout the day in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, where organisers said they hoped to continue the momentum after several nights of demonstrations triggered by the property mogul's surprise win in Tuesday's presidential election.
“We must unite despite our differences to stop HATE from ruling the land,” organisers in New York wrote in a Facebook post announcing a rally at noon local time in Union Square and then a march to Trump Tower, the president-elect’s skyscraper home on Fifth Avenue in midtown Manhattan.
Hours before the demonstrations were set to begin, a protester in Portland was shot as he took part in a march across the Morrison Bridge. He is expected to live, but the suspect remains at large, police said.
Since Mr Trump’s victory, demonstrators in several cities have decried the Republican’s campaign promises to restrict immigration and register Muslims, as well as allegations that the former reality-TV star sexually abused women.
"It is our time as a movement to unite and fight back against Donald Trump and what he wants to do to this country," organisers said on Facebook in announcing a rally in MacArthur Park in Los Angeles on Saturday.
Some 100,000 people indicated on Facebook that they were planning to attend or were interested in the anti-Trump rallies in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, where organisers told protesters that violence and vandalism will not be tolerated.
Largely peaceful
The demonstrations so far have been largely peaceful, although in Portland protesters have smashed store windows, sprayed graffiti and damaged cars as they clashed with police who used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse crowds.
Dozens of protesters have been arrested and a handful of police injured during the protests in Portland and other cities.
The demonstrations since the election have been impromptu affairs, quickly organised by young Americans with a diverse array of backgrounds and agendas.
But as activists look to the next four years with Mr Trump in the White House while his party controls both houses of Congress, some are preparing for what they hope will be the nation's most enduring demonstrations since the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said on Friday that protesters have to accept the election results.
Mr Trump initially denounced the protests and said they were “incited” by the media, but then reversed course on Friday and praised the demonstrators’ “passion for our great country.”
“We will all come together and be proud!” the president-elect said on Twitter.
Many voters were shocked by the result, after opinion polls failed to predict a win for Mr Trump.
Some 60.3 million people voted for Mr Trump, 500,000 fewer than voted for Hillary Clinton. But Mr Trump's strong showing in swing states, including Michigan, meant he triumphed in the electoral college that ultimately picks the president.
Security barricades now shield some of the businessman’s most visible properties, including the newly opened Trump International Hotel near the White House and Trump Tower in New York.
The president-elect’s biggest support base was the broad middle of the country, from the heartland through the Rust Belt, with voters in states that had long supported Democrats choosing Mr Trump after he promised to end corruption in Washington DC, bring back jobs and renegotiate international trade deals.
Reuters