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Protesters participate in “Hands Off!” demonstration at the corner of El Camino Real and Castro Street in Mountain View on April 5. Photo by Emily Margaretten.

More than a thousand demonstrators marched in Mountain View on Saturday, joining a nationwide movement protesting the Trump administration and its federal spending cuts.

The “Hands Off!” event – reportedly held in more than 1,300 cities across the country – drew a massive crowd to Mountain View and other parts of the Peninsula on April 5, making it the biggest day of collective action since President Donald Trump took office.

The Mountain View event was held by Together We Will Palo Alto Mountain View, a political action network founded by IdaRose Sylvester, a community advocate who has organized many demonstrations since the first Trump administration.

“This is by far the biggest I’ve done,” Sylvester said, estimating that about 3,000 people attended the Mountain View event.

Protesters march along El Camino Real in Mountain View as part of a nationwide “Hands Off!” demonstration on April 5. Photo by Emily Margaretten.

Protesters marched along El Camino Real from San Antonio Road to Grant Road, holding signs denouncing the Trump administration’s cuts to federal programs, as well as its policies on immigration, LGBTQ+ rights, racial equity and a number of other issues.

The march started at 11 a.m. and protesters made their way to Gateway Park a little before noon, joining more people who had convened at the corners of El Camino Real and Castro Street – an area that has long served as a site for local protests.

“This is what democracy looks like!” people chanted as vehicles honked their support up and down El Camino Real.

Demonstrators expressed an overarching anti-Trump message while also voicing opposition to Elon Musk, who has been put in charge of the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency, an agency tasked with slashing federal spending.

“People have turned out for different reasons, but we all are protesting what is happening,” said Sally Lieber, a longtime activist and an event organizer. “Our elected officials need to listen, stand up and speak out,” she said.

The “hands off” message resonated with marchers who decried the Trump administration’s cuts to health care, science, education and the environment and what they described as assaults to democracy.

Protesters march along El Camino Real in Mountain View as part of a nationwide “Hands Off!” demonstration on April 5. Photo by Emily Margaretten.

“I despise what’s happening,” said Francesco Lacapra, a Sunnyvale resident who attended the rally with his 9-year-old granddaughter. “The situation is so far from my experience,” he said.

Lacapra first came to the U.S. as a foreign exchange student in 1966. “America is the love of my life, but now look at what’s happening. It’s not right,” he said.

Protesters also railed against the recent imposition of tariffs on foreign goods, which many economists say will raise prices for American consumers.

“We need a scalpel and not a sledgehammer for reform,” said Antone Jain, a Campbell resident.

A few demonstrators held upside-down flags, expressing their outrage with the current regime while others took a different approach, displaying messages of unity and peace on their handmade placards.

Deb Stoddard, a Sunnyvale resident, said she came to the rally to protest Trump’s policies. “We have an ethical, moral problem in the country,” Stoddard said, adding that she was heartened to see so many people at the event.

Lenny Siegel, a long-time community activist and event organizer, also remarked on the large turnout. “The ‘flooding the zone’ strategy has created more opposition,” Siegel said, referring to the Trump administration’s plan to overwhelm opponents with an onslaught of initiatives.

“Now more people are showing up,” he said.

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Emily Margaretten joined the Mountain View Voice in 2023 as a reporter covering politics and housing. She was previously a staff writer at The Guardsman and a freelance writer for several local publications,...

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9 Comments

  1. More than 1000 people RSVP’d through Indivisible, but there were at least 3 to 4 thousand people total participating yesterday.

  2. Has there ever been a larger one in Mountain View? I don’t recall. I’m glad to have been there and look forward to the next one.

  3. What i love is that almost all the signs were handmade and expressed so many different concerns. I have been to protests where most of signs are printed and handed out by different organizations, which is fine, but these were personalized signs that took time and energy to make. Very peaceful and energized.

  4. Everyone was peaceful and well-behaved. An absolutely great event to show solidarity against what’s going on in Washington.

  5. “Protesters marched along El Camino Real from San Antonio Road to Grant Road, holding signs denouncing the Trump administration’s cuts to federal programs, as well as its policies on immigration, LGBTQ+ rights, racial equity and a number of other issues.”

    I took part in the rally and saw lots of the protestors’ signs. The paragraph above does not feel like it’s at all representative of the messages I saw on the signs (nor of the signs in the photos accompanying this article). IMO, very few of the protestors’ signs were drawing attention to progressive causes.

  6. I had a good laugh at the people in Teslas driving and honking with anti-Elon signs.

    Separately, it’s funny when “the hands off billionaires” people are the same people that bought their signs at Amazon.

    Good for them! Unfortunately, they are completely powerless given we live in a Republic and not a democracy, so what matters is how much power your piece of land has (Idaho vs California)

  7. I believe there are legitimate ideological differences between conservatives and liberals, that we should navigate policy change through compromise and centrist moderate reform — not wild swings of the political pendulum every cycle. To get there, we need to reform campaign finance, so that power is returned from special interests to the common sense voters.

    1. Agreed, we can start with corporate influence. Why should corporations be allowed to do political donations? How did the constitutional phrase “We The People” come to include corporations?…

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