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The National Parks Service (NPS) said Thursday it would grant permits to organizations planning to protest President-elect Donald Trump’s swearing-in later this month in Washington, D.C., a win that comes after civil rights lawyers threatened to sue the agency.

“We believe that this is a significant victory for free speech. They are doing this under threat of litigation,” Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, executive director of the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, told Reuters on Friday. The fund had written a letter (pdf) to the NPS on Thursday warning that it was in violation of the First Amendment.

The logjam had threatened to impede actions by more than 30 organizations and an estimated 900,000 people planning to protest Trump’s inauguration and his right-wing agenda.

As of Thursday, the Act Now to Stop War & End Racism (ANSWER) Coalition was the only group to have received a protest permit for the Inauguration Route on January 20. Two others, the American Constitution Society and the Black is Back Coalition, have been cleared to hold events near the National Mall, but not on the day of the ceremony.

The Women’s March on Washington—which has added civil rights icons Gloria Steinem and Harry Belafonte as honorary chairs, and drawn the support of organizations like Planned Parenthood and collectives like the Pussy Hat Project—is expected to draw at least 200,000 protesters alone for its January 21 actions, making it potentially the biggest inauguration protest in history.

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