Organize Carpools to Your Protest

Simplify Planning
Plan your protest and messaging. Your transportation should plan itself.
Limit Logistics
Don't waste time with spreadsheets and endless email chains. Take meaningful action.
Be Heard
Your protesting to get your message across. Get your people there and make sure they are heard.
Protests That Have Used Group Carpool
  • Seattle Women's March
  • The Mayday Project Protest
  • Protest Tuition Hikes @ CSU East Bay
  • Carpool for the Atlanta March for Social Justice and Women
  • Youth v Gov March: Youth United for a Frack Free Colorado
  • Women's March Portland
No Logins Required, Just Carpool
No extra account, no extra step to sign in. This sheet is designed to be as easy as possible for anyone to use.
Password Protect
Customize your GroupCarpool Dashboard so that your people ride with the people you want them to ride with.
E-Mail Notifications
Are you on the waitlist and someone adds a car? Are you a driver and someone joins your car? We'll send you an email. No more constantly checking your spreadsheet.
Mobile Friendly, No App Required
Our website is designed to be seen on the go with all smart phones. No app required, just view it straight in your browser.
Organize Carpools to Your Protest

The Women's March was a worldwide protest on January 21, 2017 in hundreds of cities across the world and had nearly 5 million people participate. On this day, GroupCarpool saw its largest carpool usership growth day ever as protesters carpooled to rallies to advocate legislation and policies regarding human rights and other issues. The protestesters setup the following carpools:

  • women's rights carpools
  • immigration reform carpools
  • healthcare reform carpools
  • the natural environment carpools
  • LGBTQ rights carpools
  • racial equality carpools
  • freedom of religion carpools
  • workers' rights carpools

The rallies were aimed at Donald Trump, immediately following his inauguration as President of the United States, largely due to statements and positions attributed to him regarded by many as anti-women or otherwise offensive. It was the largest single-day demonstration in U.S. history and most likely, the largest day of carpooling in U.S. history.

The first planned protest was in Washington, D.C., and is known as the Women's March on Washington which drew more than 500,000 people. Nearly 90 different GroupCarpools were generated in the Washington D.C. area alone with thousands of passengers and hundreds of drivers working together to get to and from the Women’s March on Washington.

We were proud to be integral part of one of the most successful peaceful marches in U.S. history and are looking forward to helping the Women's March on Washington in their "10 Actions for the first 100 Days" campaign for joint activism to keep up the momentum going.

Are you interested in starting a carpool? You can try us out for free at GroupCarpool.com