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In a total failure to accept a clear electoral loss, leftists plan to gather in Washington, D.C., and other large cities across the nation on Jan. 20, Donald Trump’s Inauguration Day. They claim their aim is to “defeat Trump’s extreme right, billionaire agenda.”

Good luck with that, losers.

The FBI is still prosecuting people who attended the chaotic Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Based on that, shouldn’t these leftists be worried that they too will be thrown into jail for being present and disagreeable? Will the FBI and Department of Justice disseminate their photos, knock on their doors, interview their friends, drag them to court, and leave them to languish in prison?

Probably not. Conservatives don’t throw the opposition in prison; it’s un-American and unconstitutional.

Besides, this group has been making noise for years and no one is listening. They joined forces and protested in 2017 at the start of Trump’s first term.  

Even when they camp out on college campuses screeching antisemitic themes, or bust into locked buildings, arrests have been limited, because often, they stage disruption where political winds blow their way.

The group would want its name published here, because no publicity is bad publicity. Actually, it is a group of groups, recruiting agitators, bound together by identity politics and a penchant for street theater. You know some by their “Free Palestine” chants.

They are organizing at the website wefightback2025.org, with maps and Jan. 20 meeting times and addresses. On social media, supporters are encouraged to plaster flyers in public areas to recruit more people.

At first glance, their political concerns seem right out of the Democrat playbook, but their agenda goes beyond that. It takes a leftist decoder ring to understand the website’s messaging. Let’s break it down.

“Trump ran a con game during the election,” the website reads, and goes on to describe what it calls Trump’s “real agenda.”

They say he will “destroy worker’s rights,” meaning he may not do the bidding of labor unions.

They say Trump will “deport millions of immigrant families.” They mean he will remove illegal aliens who entered the U.S.

They warn Trump will, “pave the way for a complete corporate capitalist takeover.” They mean the inroads made toward socialism under Biden will be reversed.

They say Trump will end “regulations to protect the environment.” They mean Trump won’t force mandates like electric car quotas.

One strategy in identity politics is to connect smaller groups focused on one issue, such as the environment or immigration, then have that group join forces with other identity groups. Organizers give them a time, place, and unified message, and they have a larger voice than they would on their own. That is what is happening here; various groups gathering in their unified opposition of the Trump agenda.   

Click the donation button on the website, and the movement appears to be organized by The People’s Forum, a nonprofit. The website lists other organizations involved in the planned Jan. 20 disruptions: The ANSWER Coalition, Party for Socialism & Liberation, Democratic Socialists of America, Palestinian Youth Movement, US Palestinian Community Network, Labor on the Line, Black Men Build, Artists Against Apartheid, Bangladeshi Americans for Political Progress, CODEPINK, Los Angeles Tenants Union, Palestinian Feminist Collective, the Korean group Nodutdol, and others. Many of the groups are connected. A check of their social media shows their graphics and messaging are similar.   

The United States and the Democrat Party have moved to the right, the recruiting website says. It offers a socialist solution: “We can defeat the Trump program. Not by following the Democratic Party establishment, but by building a massive movement against the ruling class and the political system that gives everything to billionaires while impoverishing an ever larger section of the population.”

Their agenda did not resonate with the majority of voters. If this were 2021, they would be telling conservatives to accept the loss, sit down, and be quiet. But a lot of patriots refused to be quiet.

Many went to prison in the last four years over their understanding that we still allow free speech in this country, even if what you are saying is unpopular. Public disgust at patriot persecution brought a lot of people to the polls in November. They voted to protect the First Amendment. The right to free speech still holds, as long as no crimes are committed.

Americans who wish to see Trump’s agenda implemented should take these “progressive” agitators seriously. They are too big to ignore. They wish to force their values on a nation that has soundly rejected them. Their growing presence and disruption in Europe and the radicalization of Americans, such as the alleged terrorist in the New Year’s attack in New Orleans, hint at an unwanted future where they would not allow equal access to the very free speech that lets their voices to be heard today.


Beth Brelje is an elections correspondent for The Federalist. She is an award-winning investigative journalist with decades of media experience.