It was Easter weekend and the sun was shining, so Brandon Wick, co-organizer of the Camas Progressives political group, wasn’t going to count his eggs before they hatched.
Sure, his political group had been gaining members over the past few months and had a good track record when it came to people showing up for events, rallies and demonstrations. But the rally in question was taking place the Saturday before Easter Sunday and the sun had finally broken through the clouds, so Wick wasn’t 100 percent certain that his group’s Tax Day rally would win out over things like family gatherings, yard work and just plain fun-in-the sun.
“We may get 10, maybe 15 people,” Wick said Friday afternoon, one day before the Camas Progressives’ planned Tax Day demonstration in east Vancouver — where local activists would call on President Donald Trump to meet his campaign promise and make his taxes available to the public.
But Wick was in for a pleasant surprise — instead of the 10 or so activists he expected, about two dozen people turned out for the demonstration at the 192nd Avenue and Mill Plain Boulevard intersection, and held their “Show Your Taxes” signs held high.
“It’s a good turnout,” Wick said. “Better than I expected.”
Some people at the rally — like David McDevitt, a political candidate with aspirations of unseating U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, a Republican, in the 2018 general election — are well steeped in the political arena, but most of the folks who turned out for the Camas Progressives’ April 15 Tax Day rally, described themselves as political newcomers. Several said Trump’s unexpected victory in November had pushed them out of their comfort zones.