Millions
across all 50 US states march in No Kings protests against Trump
Crowds of
Americans, many in costumes, aligned behind message that US is sliding into
authoritarianism
Rachel
Leingang and Edward Helmore
Sat 18
Oct 2025 20.16 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/oct/18/no-kings-protests-events-states
Americans
across all 50 states marched in protests against the Trump administration on
Saturday, aligning behind a message that the country is sliding into
authoritarianism and there should be no kings in the US.
Millions
of people turned out for the No Kings protests, the second iteration of a
coalition that marched in June in one of the largest days of protest in US
history.
People in
communities big and small came together nationwide with signs, marching bands,
a huge banner with the US constitution’s preamble that people could sign, and
inflatable costumes, particularly frogs, which have emerged as a sign of
resistance beginning in Portland, Oregon.
The
rallies are a turnaround from just six months ago, when Democrats seemed at a
loss as to how to counter Republicans’ grip of the White House and both houses
of Congress after stinging national election losses.
“What we
are seeing from the Democrats is some spine,” Ezra Levin, a co-founder of
Indivisible, a key organizing group, told the Associated Press. “The worst
thing the Democrats could do right now is surrender.”
In
Chicago, at Grant Park’s Butler Field, at least 10,000 people assembled, many
with signs opposing federal immigration agents or mocking Trump. TV stations
with feeds from protests warned viewers they could not be responsible for the
language used in the signage. A later crowd estimate by the Chicago Tribune put
the number at 100,000.
Some of
them said “Hands Off Chicago”, a rallying cry that began when the president
first announced his intent to send the national guard into the city. Others
read “Resist Fascism”, but many others used language unsuitable for broadcast.
The crowd
erupted in chants of “Fuck Donald Trump” when Illinois representative Jonathan
Jackson took the stage.
Chicago’s
mayor, Brandon Johnson, told the crowd the Trump administration had “decided
that they want a rematch of the civil war”, which the white supremacist
Confederacy lost to the Union in the 19th century.
“We are
here to stand firm and stand committed that we will not bend, we will not bow,
we will not cower, we will not submit,” Johnson said. “We do not want troops in
our city.”
On
Saturday, Ginny Eschbach joined her 42nd protest since Trump’s inauguration in
January.
The
72-year-old came to the No Kings rally in Los Angeles dressed as SpongeBob
SquarePants, her second choice after not being able to find an inflatable frog
costume.
“I wanted
to be whimsical, because I think that lets them know, when we’re here, we’re
serious, however, we are not dangerous and we are not violent,” she said,
referring to Republicans’ efforts to paint the rallies as dangerous and
un-American. “We are just not happy.”
For
Eschbach, who drove in from Thousand Oaks, a city north-west of Los Angeles,
and carried an American flag, the Trump administration’s crackdown on free
speech has been particularly alarming.
“I
personally am not happy with the erosion of our first amendment rights,” she
said. “This is my gravest concern, as they attack universities, the media, law
firms and now our very own freedom of speech and threaten our ability to
peacefully assemble.”
More than
200,000 Washington DC-area residents rallied near the US Capitol. In many
cities, protesters wore inflatable animal costumes – a Dada-esque theme created
during immigration enforcement protests in Portland, Oregon, to counter the
administration’s narrative of a city under the grip of lawlessness and chaos.
While the
main protest march in downtown Portland, Oregon, was peaceful and local police
officers helped block off streets and bridges for the marchers, a smaller
protest outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in the city’s
south waterfront neighborhood was met with force by federal officers.
Suzette
Smith of the Portland Mercury reported on Bluesky that federal agents hurled
gas canisters at protesters who gathered at the facility before a schedule 5pm
protest.
In Santa
Fe, New Mexico, costumed characters included unicorns, chickens and frogs.
“It’s about the absurdity of it all,” resident Amy Adler told the Santa Fe New
Mexican while wearing a lobster suit she described as an ode to Portland.
On
FoxLive, national security analyst Lt Col Hal Kempfer debated whether the
costumes were for defensive purposes “I don’t discount that they are just
showing off the costumes but any costume like that could provide a certain
amount of defensive protection from pepper balls and stuff. But you have to
weigh against that you can’t move very fast and you can’t see as well.”
In
Georgia, at least 10,000 people had filled the field of the Atlanta Civic
Center in preparation for a march to the state capital by mid-morning.
“I heard
an American president stand up the other day and say to generals in our
military that we’ve got to stand up against the enemy within,” said the US
senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia.
“I don’t
care what your politics are. If you are an American citizen, you should be
deeply concerned,” Warnock said. He warned about the presence of federal law
enforcement “showing up in communities all across our country.
“What the
hell is happening? And all of us have to be concerned.”
Trump has
cracked down on US cities, attempting to send in federal troops and adding more
immigration agents. He is seeking to criminalize dissent, going after
left-leaning organizations that he claims are supporting terrorism or political
violence.
Cities
have largely fought back, suing to prevent national guard infusions, and
residents have taken to the streets to speak out against the militarization of
their communities.
Trump’s
allies have sought to cast the No Kings protests as anti-American and led by
antifa, the decentralized anti-fascist movement, while also claiming that the
protests are prolonging the government shutdown. Greg Abbott, the governor of
Texas, has said he would send the state’s national guard to Austin, the state’s
capital, in advance of the protests.
Some
politicians, including Democratic senators Chuck Schumer and Chris Murphy, and
independent senator Bernie Sanders, attended the protests. The No Kings
coalition has repeatedly underscored its commitment to nonviolent resistance,
and tens of thousands of participants have trained on safety and de-escalation
tactics.
“What’s
most important as a message for people to carry is that the president wants us
to be scared, but we will not be bullied into fear and silence,” said Lisa
Gilbert, the co-president of Public Citizen, one of the protest organizers.
“And it’s incredibly important for people to remain peaceful, to stand proud
and to say what they care about, and not to be cowed by that fear.”
More than
200 organizations have signed on as partners for the 18 October protests.
Organizers have identified several anchor cities: Washington DC, San Francisco,
San Diego, Atlanta, New York City, Houston, Honolulu, Boston, Kansas City in
Missouri, Bozeman in Montana, Chicago and New Orleans.
The
simple framing of the protests is that the US has no kings, a dig at Trump’s
increasing authoritarianism. Trump told Fox News on Friday: “They say they’re
referring to me as a king. I’m not a king.” Leading Republicans, including
House speaker Mike Johnson, have described the protests as a “hate America
rally”.
In
Washington DC, Vermont senator Bernie Sanders responded to Johnson’s
characterization, saying: “Boy, does he have it wrong. Millions of Americans
are coming out today not because they hate America, but because we love
America. We’re here because we’re going to do everything we can to honor the
sacrifices of millions of men and women who over the last 250 years fought and
sometimes died to defend our democracy and our freedoms.”
Among the
themes the organizers have pointed to: Trump is using taxpayer money for power
grabs, sending in federal forces to take over US cities; the president has said
he wants a third term and “is already acting like a monarch”; the Trump
administration has taken its agenda too far, defying the courts and slashing
services while deporting people without due process.
Leftist
groups have called for the enunciation of a clear political program and
concrete demands. In a 15 October statement, No Kings, No Nazi Führers!
Mobilize the Working Class Against Trump’s Dictatorship!, the Socialist
Equality Party said the central slogan, “No Kings”, articulates vast popular
hostility to autocracy but warned that “anger and outrage are not enough to
stop dictatorship”.
The
progressive group Public Citizen said the protests aimed to counter “the most
unlawful administration in American history”, adding that “millions of
Americans will come together in peaceful pro-democracy protests to show that we
will never bow to a king”.
The June
No Kings protests drew millions to the streets, with the Harvard Crowd Counting
Consortium estimating that between 2 million and 4.8 million people attended
protests across the more than 2,000 locations in what was “probably the
second-largest single day demonstration since Trump first took office in
January 2017”, second to the Women’s March in 2017.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário