It’s déjà vu all over again—but louder, angrier, and with more hashtags.
Actress Frances Fisher, best known for her roles in Titanic and The Edge of Night, has resurfaced on the political stage, leading a new charge against former President Donald Trump.
In a fiery new video, Fisher calls for a nationwide “walkout” to protest what she calls an “illegal administration” and urges Americans to “walk in” to congressional offices to demand impeachment. Yep—impeachment. Again.
The two-minute video, which starts with Fisher shouting the iconic line “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore,” doubles down on calls for direct political confrontation.
The Remove Coalition, the group behind the campaign, rolled out the announcement on Instagram, coordinating with the Women’s March and branding the action under the hashtags #FreeAmerica and #RemoveTheRegime. If the language feels dramatic, that’s because it’s meant to be. The post didn’t tiptoe around anything—it declared that Trump’s presidency must “come to an end” and urged Congress to name him directly in new impeachment articles and force a vote.
Actress Frances Fisher leads an ensemble of left-wing activists calling for a mass “walkout” in protest of Donald Trump and a “walk in” to congressional offices to demand the president’s impeachment. pic.twitter.com/yraAkiAIdi
— Breitbart News (@BreitbartNews) January 19, 2026
Now, keep in mind, this is all happening well after Trump left office in 2021 and before the 2026 election season kicks into full gear. So what exactly is the game plan here? The answer seems to lie in what activists are calling an “escalated commitment.”
According to the Women’s March website, the goal is to build on past protests and shift from symbolic action to civil disobedience—walking out of work, school, and everyday life as a form of resistance.
This isn’t just another march, they say—it’s a call to stop “cooperating with fascism.” That’s the tone, the messaging, and the mission. For critics of Trump and his continued influence on politics, it’s a rallying cry. For his supporters, it’s just more political theater.
What’s clear is that January 20 isn’t just an anniversary date—it’s being framed as a flashpoint. And with a growing number of Hollywood voices reentering the arena and progressive groups linking arms, this protest could become the first major activist push of the 2026 election cycle.
So here we go again. New slogans, same fight, and a whole lot of dramatic energy ready to hit the streets.



