(Reuters) -
Hundreds of anti-Wall Street protesters sought to upstage the 123rd Tournament
of Roses parade on Monday but were largely confined to the sidelines.
Several
hundred protesters marched in a "human float" that followed behind
the official parade, unfurling a 250-foot banner of the constitution and also
displayed an approximately 70-foot octopus made of recycled plastic grocery
bags.
"Everything
is not coming up roses," one protester's sign said. Another read,
"This is what Democracy looks like."
Onlookers
were allowed to walk along the parade route behind the official floats, so the
protesters were joined by thousands of spectators and even a handful of
counter-protesters, one of whom admonished the protesters to "get a
job" on his megaphone.
The iconic
Tournament of Roses parade, which was first held on New Year's Day in 1890, is
broadcast on several U.S. television networks and in dozens of countries around
the world.
The
protesters' attempts to gain national attention were largely thwarted by
television networks, which gave little attention to their efforts.
Three
activists who were seated along parade the route did manage to unfurl a banner
that read "Stop Foreclosures" across from the television news cameras
when a Wells Fargo-sponsored carriage passed by before police quickly took it
down.
"We
wanted to send a message to Wells Fargo and every other bank," said Joshua
Taylor, one of the three protesters.
Some
protesters who marched behind the parade were wearing tents in a nod to the
movement's origins, which was launched in New York in September and quickly saw
tent cities spring up in major cities across the country to protest against
economic inequality, corporate excesses, high unemployment and bailouts of
major banks.
Protesters
have since embraced a range of other causes, and in some cities the
demonstrations have also focused on grievances about excessive police use of
force.
(Writing by
Mary Slosson; Editing by Greg McCune)

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