
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who won the Democratic primary for New York’s 14th Congressional District, addresses demonstrators at City Hall Plaza gathered in opposition to the Trump administration’s Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

Congresswomen-elect Ayanna Pressley and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speak to reporters.

Marta
Rivera and Marty Martinez, chief of staff and chief of the city’s
Department of Health and Human Services at the City Hall rally
protesting Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court.
Demonstrators urge Arizona senator to vote ‘no’
Hundreds of protestors, survivors of sexual assault and elected officials stood on the steps of Boston City Hall on Monday morning to urge Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake to reject Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court.
What started as a Facebook event organized by Emerson College students turned into a large protest supported by representatives from Planned Parenthood, the ACLU and NARAL, in the shadow of the ongoing Forbes Under 30 Summit on City Hall Plaza at 10 a.m. on Oct. 1. Local and national political figures lent their voice to cries of “Kava-nope,” including U.S. Sen. Ed Markey; the Democratic nominee for New York’s 14th Congressional District, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez; Massachusetts state Senate President Karen Spilka; Mayor Martin J. Walsh; at-large City Councilor and future congresswoman Ayanna Pressley; and many of her city council colleagues.
“Brett Kavanaugh is not fit to be on the United States Supreme Court,” said Rebecca Hart Holder, executive director of NARAL, a pro-choice nonprofit. “He does not
stand for women’s equality, he does not stand for LGBTQ rights, he does
not stand for the rights of people of color, he does not stand for
labor rights, he does not stand for low-income people, and we are going
to keep fighting.”
Holder
opened the program of speeches, arranged to coincide with the arrival
in Boston of Republican Sen. Flake, who was scheduled to give a
presentation at City Hall last Monday. She was not alone in her vehement
denial of Kavanaugh’s suitability for a lifetime appointment to the
Supreme Court.
Markey
said Kavanaugh’s behavior during questioning by the Senate Judiciary
Committee last week showed his “anger, belligerence, evasiveness … and
lack of judicial temperament,” while Carol Rose, executive director of
the ACLU of Massachusetts called Kavanaugh “unhinged.”
Kavanaugh accused
Kavanaugh, who was nominated by
President Trump in July, was set to begin proceedings for appointment
to the highest court in the country when allegations of sexual assault
began to surface. A former high school classmate, Dr. Christine Blasey
Ford, has said that she was attacked by Kavanaugh and his friend Mark
Judge at a party when she was 15 years old. There are now three separate
allegations against Kavanaugh, who is currently the subject of a
weeklong FBI investigation requested by Sen. Flake following emotional
testimonies by Kavanaugh and Ford before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
“We
are entitled to truth, survivors are entitled to justice … Brett
Kavanaugh is not entitled to a lifetime appointment,” said Pressley.
“I
am black, I am a woman and I am a survivor, and I am outraged, because
this is outrageous,” she continued, emphasizing the experience of sexual
assault for women of color.
“What
has been coming out of this administration has been a firehose of
insult and assault to our civil rights, our protections, our freedoms,
our democracy, our humanity,” Pressley told reporters after the protest.
“They want to divide us. They want to make us feel small. But we are
powerful.”
Pressley
said the real disgrace in Kavanaugh’s nomination proceedings is the
nation’s tolerance of rape culture. “We have been complicit in our
silence,” she said.
One person notably not in attendance
at the rally was Governor Charlie Baker. A transgender black woman and
survivor of sexual assault stood on stage to tell the audience how she
feared for her life on a daily basis, before flatly asking where the
governor was and why he was not present to show his support for the
#stopkavanaugh campaign.
Abuse of power
Ocasio-Cortez shared her personal history
of assault, from being a child in New York who was almost abducted, to
an 18-year old student at Boston University, witnessing an inebriated
girl flung over a man’s shoulder and carried to a second-floor bedroom.
“Sexual
assault is not a crime of passion, it is about the abuse of power,”
said Ocasio-Cortez, “and that is precisely why it is one of the most
serious allegations anyone who cares to be a public servant can be
accused of.”
Many of the speakers expressed support for Ford, praising her courage in publicly sharing her traumatic experience.
“It
is always women who are marginalized,” said Ocasio-Cortez. “It is the
young, it is the intern, it is the immigrant, it is the trans. They’re
always most at risk because society listens to them the least.”
Pressley and Ocasio-Cortez both said grassroots activism has been most effective at fighting the Trump administration agenda.
“It’s
really not about people like Ayanna and us getting others to listen,”
said Ocasio-Cortez. “The best we can do is advocate for our communities,
represent our districts, but ultimately it’s going to be everyday
people contacting their representatives that’s going to get them to
change their minds.”
Pressley
spoke of the bravery of the two survivors who confronted Sen. Flake in
an elevator in the U.S. capitol last Friday, after he affirmed his
decision to vote for Kavanaugh.
“Years
ago, we would have said that’s not the appropriate thing to do. This is
a man of power, privilege and prestige walking into an elevator — leave
him alone. Those days are over,” said Pressley.
The
speakers and the chanting crowd seemed determined not to let the
Republican senator leave Boston without hearing their message. “Let’s
raise our voices to be heard and say, ‘no more,’” said Democratic
gubernatorial nominee, Jay Gonzalez, who spoke during the rally.
“Look me in the eye when I’m talking to you,” said Pressley, appearing to speak directly to Sen. Flake. “Can you hear me now?”