The November 20–22 impeachment rally in D.C. is designed to overwhelm Congress with sheer public presence.
Mass participation becomes leverage when lawmakers refuse to show backbone on their own.
Democratic energy grows when people act collectively rather than wait for permission.
Sam Osterhout, Michael Fanone, and Cliff Cash make the coming D.C. rally feel less like symbolism and more like a demonstration of political inevitability, the kind that forces Congress to confront what happens when thousands refuse to stay quiet. They treat mass turnout as a pressure point — a way to make avoidance impossible and to remind lawmakers that power is supposed to answer to the public, not hide from it. The drive behind this moment is simple: if institutions won’t defend democracy, citizens have to become the loudest fact in the room. That’s why they frame the impeachment push as a test of scale, a chance to box in risk-averse leaders through visibility and volume.
Tune in to the full discussion now!
The GOP's 'No Kings' Defense for Trump
Every few years, the right discovers a new way to defend Donald Trump.














