Indivisible Greater Jenkintown, a branch of the Washington, D.C.-based political activist organization Indivisible (also known as The Indivisible Project), is organizing a series of protests at 3905 Welsh Road in Willow Grove (Upper Moreland Township).
The chosen location is the site of a Citizens Bank branch, which, according to Indivisible.org, “has long financed private prison and detention operators despite decades of allegations of abuse, neglect, forced labor, and fraud.”
The first protest is scheduled for March 7 from 11:00am – 12:00pm. Subsequent protests will be held on the first Saturday of every month, according to the announcement.
The announcement continues:
Companies like CoreCivic and GEO Group have caused widespread harm — including wrongful deaths, medical neglect, and exploitation.
Right here in Pennsylvania, GEO operates the Moshannon Valley Processing Center, the largest ICE detention facility in the Northeast, just three hours from Montgomery County. Join us– and others statewide– to tell Citizens Bank that we want them to stop supporting cruelty.
We would like to hold actions at more branch locations based on interest.
According to their website, Indivisible is “organizing against this fascistic clown show of a regime the only way that actually works: with on-the-ground, volunteer-led, communities of people power.”
Open Society Foundations has awarded $7,260,000 in grants to The Indivisible Project (Indivisible) since 2018, according to their website. According to a September 2025 CNN article, Open Society Foundations is funded by George Soros, a 95-year-old billionaire investor, and is now chaired by his son, Alex Soros.
In greater Glenside, Indivisible’s Jenkintown and Hatboro chapters helped organize the “ICE Out for Good” protests last month. They also helped organize July’s “Good Trouble Lives On” protest in Abington, and June’s “No Kings” protest in Glenside and Elkins Park.
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