Story and photos by Stephen Zenner
TOLEDO – Almost three weeks into his second term, President Donald J. Trump has already done much to upset his opposition, leading to a national 50501 (50 protests, 50 states, one day) anti-trump protest on Wednesday.
But here in Toledo, a ragtag conglomeration of groups took to the corner of Central Ave. and Secor Rd. on Saturday to localize that discontent against the new president’s unpopular administration policies and Elon Musk’s extensive unelected reach.
Heavily layered to stave off sleet, snow and bitter cold, the group spread out across each corner of the intersection, waving all manner of signs to protest as many causes as there were people.


“It’s everything!” exclaimed Becky Koskinen, 67, of Old Orchard, when asked what made her want to protest. Top on Koskinen’s list were that Trump pardoned January 6th convicts, wrote executive orders against transgender individuals and, perhaps the most controversial of Trump’s latest actions, appointed Elon Musk as the head of the new Department Of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
“Elon Musk, we didn’t vote for him,” she said, outraged, as the Tesla and X [formerly known as Twitter] CEO has moved to cut government jobs and even destroy full government agencies empowered by Trump. Musk was not elected democratically or confirmed by congress, but designated by the Whitehouse as a special government employee (SGE) within the United States DOGE Service (USDS), formerly the United States Digital Service.
Trump has never done as much as he is doing now, and compared to his last election, the oppositional reaction has been somewhat delayed. Countless protestors took to the streets immediately the last time Trump was elected, but it appears people may be bracing themselves.
As of Friday, the second term president has already signed a flurry of 56 executive orders. This is more than most presidents sign in their first 100 days, and already surpasses Trump’s previous 100 days, at 33 back in 2017.
The shear number of executive orders illustrates how Trump views his power in the Whitehouse, but opponents of the new president say he is overstepping his constitutional bounds.
“He’s acting like a monarch,” said Dan Rutt, 63, of central Toledo, referring to Trump. “He’s creating a constitutional crisis by not respecting the Constitution and the powers of Congress.”

The latest center of Trump and Musk’s fury is the United States Agency for International Development or USAID, which Musk has threatened to destroy with seemingly little resistance.
Congress holds the power of the purse, so it’s up to Congress how the funds procured for USAID are used. But for a president to gut an entire agency without coordination from Congress would be shocking, and critics of the president accuse him of violating the constitution for acting so brazenly, accuse Musk of conflicts of interest, and feel the number of executive orders is meant to overwhelm them.
“They try to get people tired by ‘shock and awe’ by doing all of the orders,” said Mindy Adams, 47, of west Toledo.

Perhaps the most shocking order dealt with a pause on federal financial aid, later rescinded by the president when met with legal opposition.
But as protesters gathered at the Toledo intersection yesterday, cars drove by with a variety of hand gestures to show their dissatisfaction with protesters and their support for Trump.
Organizer of the protest, Makailyn Cowell, 26, west Toledo, said she and others had organized a protest two weeks earlier, and had spread the event on Saturday across social media.
“We had heard on Reddit that there were people looking for protests to attend,” Cowell said, adding that the organizers put the protest together because of “all the B.S. going on. There’s a lot of stuff that’s coming out, all the time. We can’t just sit here and do nothing. We have to go out and do something.”

People came out to support immigrants, refugees, women’s rights, and LGBTQ+ rights. There were a few individuals who said they were disabled, who came out in support of Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI).
“Life gets hard,” Adams said, and expressed fear over cuts to DEI, and how it might affect her disability, fibromyalgia.
In just a few weeks, Trump has ceased refugee resettlement; buffered border security; ended DEI programs within the government; pulled the United States out of the World Health Organization (WHO); threatened to defund any funds associated with DEI; barred transgender individuals from military service; and the list goes on.
It was evident that all of these changes have discomforted and angered the protesters, and that they are worried about the the future of this country.
“Are people gonna start, like, literally attacking us and hate crime people who aren’t white and rich?” asked social worker, Leigh Pinkleman, 34, of east Toledo. “I know a lot of my trans friends are worried because of how things have been in the past.”
What is next for the country is unclear as American citizens scramble to accommodate the new Trump administration. But Cowell and the other protesters wanted to show their unhappiness with the current president, and said they would do more organizing in the future.
Editor's Note: There were no counter-protestors present at this rally.