Ride for the Constitution, a collection of truck drivers who descended on Washington D.C. Friday for a weekend-long protest, has gained traction on social media, but has yet to make a significant impact on the D.C. area.
While organizers had hoped thousands — perhaps as many as 10,000 — would participate, the numbers appear to be far lower. A few dozen tractor-trailers and pick-up trucks have been spotted driving around Interstate 495 sporting American flags and signs that said #T2SDA – which stands for Truckers to Shut Down America — according to reports from NBC Washingtonand the Washington Post. Those reports also note that aside from a few exceptions, most of those trucks have been moving with the regular speed of traffic, rather than impeding it. USA Today went so far as to report that heavy rains in the area seemed to be having a greater impact on traffic than the truckers.
The Virginia State Police dispatched additional troopers in anticipation of the event, but have had few issues to deal with. One exception occurred early Friday morning when four tractor-trailers blocked the highway, slowing traffic to around 15 miles per hour, according to state police. Troopers eventually pulled the vehicles over, “warned them not to impede traffic,” according to Virginia State Police spokeswoman Corrine Geller, allowing them to ”proceed on their way” without issuing any tickets.
Some on twitter captured images of the tractor-trailers on traffic cameras.
The hashtag T2SDA was lighting up twitter on Friday, making it into the trending topic list at least once during the day. The Ride for the Constitution Facebook page saw significant traffic as well, climbing up to 170,000 likes as of Friday afternoon.
The protesters officially oppose “corruption that is destroying America,” and earlier this week organizers said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Dianne Feinsteincould be arrested. Organizer and right wing radio host Pete Santilli told U.S. News & World Report subsequently that truckers and other participants are calling for President Obama to be impeached, but backed down from earlier calls that the truckers would “arrest” congressmen.
Santilli and his fellow organizer, Zeeda Andrews, both have been associated with fringe conspiracy theories, as Media Matters has chronicled closely. Andrews may in fact believe that President Obama and Osama Bin Laden are the same person.
Morgan Whitaker









