By Euan McKirdy and Susanna Capelouto, CNN
They chanted anti-Donald Trump slogans. They flooded city streets. They gathered near the White House, disheartened and dismayed.
“Not my president, not today,” many across the nation yelled.
In cities from Boston to Los Angeles, thousands of demonstrators gathered Wednesday night in protest of election results that mean the billionaire real estate developer will be the next president.
As many as 5,000 people were at a protest in New York, police estimated. Among the issues being yelled about outside Trump Tower were immigration and Obamacare.
(CNN’s Jean Casarez speaks to an anti-Trump protester in New York. Courtesy of CNN and YouTube)
“I came out here to let go of a lot of fear that was sparked as soon as I saw the results,” protester Nick Powers said.
He said he feared Trump will support stronger stop-and-frisk policies that would put many people in prison. He was worried that Trump’s victory would embolden sexist views.
Many of the protests were in cities with large Democratic bases — in Atlanta; Austin, Texas; Boston; Chicago; Denver; Philadelphia; Portland, Oregon; San Francisco, Seattle and Washington.
In Chicago, people walked down a normally busy Lakeshore Drive, carrying signs.
In Portland, marchers chanted “No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA” as they trekked through downtown.
Protesters in D.C., who headed to the Trump International Hotel, shouted the same slogan. After an earlier solemn gathering at the White House a few dozen young people remained, their cries profane.
(Crowds gather outside of Trump Tower to protest President-elect Donald Trump, saying, “Donald Trump is not our president.” CNN’s Jean Casarez reports. Courtesy of CNN and YouTube)
White House candlelight vigil
A candlelight vigil for Clinton supporters in front of the White House on Wednesday evening drew those who wanted to mourn their election loss.
The peaceful crowd called out “you are not alone” to over 2,600 people watching the gathering on Facebook, organizers said.
Maybelline McCoy, an immigrant from Panama, came to the vigil with her three children.
“My biggest fear is that they will be limited, that they will see people being silenced and invalidated and that I won’t be able to shield them,” she said.
Protests after the vote count
In the wee hours of Wednesday morning after the votes were counted, one member of the crowd near the White House held an upside-down American flag, alongside the LGBT rainbow flag, in silent protest.
Supporters celebrate
Others went to the White House late Tuesday and early Wednesday to show their support for Trump.
Nicholas Elliot, a student at Washington’s Georgetown University, said he was elated about Trump’s election.
“I feel pretty good, a year and a half process has ended and it ended my way,” the Texan told WJLA. He said he thought it was “definitely the responsibility of both parties” to unite the country.
Referencing the United Kingdom’s Brexit vote to leave the European Union, which “translated strongly here,” he said he had no fear his candidate would lose.
“There is a hidden vote,” he said, contending people didn’t voice their true voting intentions to pollsters in case they were perceived as sexist, racist or homophobic.
At the University of Louisville in Kentucky, the base of a large-scale bronze cast of Rodin’s “The Thinker” was spray-painted with the message: Trump #BuildThatWall.”
CNN’s Paul Vercammen contributed to this story
Original post http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/09/politics/election-results-reaction-streets/index.html