Third No
Kings protest draws millions from across US to push back on Trump
administration
Anti-authoritarian
rallies, taking place in all 50 states plus 16 countries, are expected to be
biggest in US history
Lex
McMenamin, Fabiola Cineas, Rachel Leingang and Amy Qin
Sat 28
Mar 2026 22.27 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/28/no-kings-protests-trump
More than
3,000 No Kings protests against the Trump administration were held nationwide
and in more than a dozen countries on Saturday, according to a coalition of
organizers that includes “anti-authoritarian” groups Indivisible and 50501,
labor unions and other grassroots organizations.
“I would
expect March 28 to be the biggest protest in American history,” Ezra Levin,
co-founder of Indivisible, said ahead of the protests.
Saturday’s
protest is the third No Kings; the last one in October drew 7 million people
nationwide.
At the
“flagship” event in Minnesota’s Twin Cities, Minneapolis and St Paul,
organizers estimate around 200,000 people filled the streets around the state
capitol to commiserate, mourn and speak out against the Trump administration.
Bernie
Sanders, the independent Vermont senator, riled up the crowd with remarks about
the role of the ultra-rich in politics. Bruce Springsteen sang his song about
the death and destruction brought by ICE to the state, Streets of Minneapolis,
leading the crowd in chants of “Ice out now!”
The
state’s governor, Tim Walz, introduced Springsteen, saying it was clear America
needed “no damn kings” but it needed the Boss. Walz commended the state’s
people for standing up for each other and for immigrants when Trump sent in
thousands of federal agents, who killed Minneapolis residents Renee Good and
Alex Pretti. Their names were featured heavily in No Kings protest signs in the
city. Jane Fonda even read a statement from Good’s wife, Brenda.
In New
York City, multiple No Kings contingents merged through Times Square, as well
as the outer boroughs. Minutes before the main march was set to take off from
Central Park, the state’s attorney general, Letitia James; the city’s public
advocate, Jumaane Williams; actor Robert DeNiro; the Rev Al Sharpton; and Padma
Lakshmi filed into the front of the crowd holding hand-painted banners that
read: “We protect our democracy – people over billionaires – we protect our
neighbors.”
Families
carried LGBTQ+ pride and Palestinian flags, while other marchers held pun-heavy
signs and handed out whistles in New York. Many signs and chants included
anti-ICE, anti-Trump and pro-LGBTQ+ rights messaging. But perhaps the most
consistent theme was anti-war. “This war has to stop,” said MB, 55, a Queens
resident who didn’t want to use their full name for safety reasons. “American
people do not want what this administration is doing. We don’t want it. We need
healthcare, we need jobs. We need infrastructure.”
In
Washington DC, one protest group, made up of about a dozen Palestinian mothers,
stood at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and waved a 10ft-tall Palestinian
flag. “Most Americans don’t know that our tax dollars are being used to
subsidize violence,” Hazami Barmada, 42, said. “This is happening while many
Americans can’t afford housing, milk, school or healthcare. Prices continue to
go up as we are fighting Israel’s wars.”
Other
protesters, led by local activist organizations including Free DC, gathered at
the Frederick Douglass Bridge in south-east Washington DC. The crowd marched
across the bridge to Fort McNair in Southwest DC, where the White House senior
adviser Stephen Miller resides.
In
downtown Chicago, protestors chanted “Trump must go now, fascists gotta go now”
and “Ice out” as they filed into Grant Park. Chicago’s mayor, Brandon Johnson,
addressed the crowd of thousands: “Look around, our movement is bigger, our
resolve is bigger.”
Other
speakers at Chicago’s rally discussed labor rights and keeping immigrant and
trans communities safe. “When we build a world that protects trans people, we
build a world that’s better for everyone,” said Iggy Ladden, the founder of the
Chicago Therapy Collective.
More than
two-thirds of participants who RSVP’d for No Kings events were “outside of
major urban centers”, including Republican-controlled areas and bellwether
counties, said Leah Greenberg, co-founder of Indivisible, at a press conference
on Thursday.
On
Saturday, hundreds also showed up in deep-red cities such as Lebanon,
Pennsylvania; Midland, Texas; and Boise, Idaho, holding signs to protest
against Trump and the war in Iran. Crowds also protested around the globe in
Tokyo, Paris, Berlin, Rome and Sydney, Australia.
A
multiplicity of stressors drew protesters across issues, organizers said, from
ICE raids to voting rights threats. “Since the last No Kings, we’re seeing
higher gas prices and groceries, all while there’s an illegal war in Iran,”
said Sarah Parker, the executive director of Voices of Florida and a national
coordinator for the 50501 movement. “The people of America are pissed.”
Counterprotesters
also showed up at rallies, including in West Palm Beach, Florida, CNN reported.
About 50 pro-Trump demonstrators with megaphones and “Proud Boys” hats argued
with No Kings protesters, according to the outlet.
The No
Kings coalition had repeatedly emphasized the “nonviolent” nature of the day of
action. Parker noted ahead of the protests that leaders were being trained in
de-escalation. The No Kings website states that participants were not allowed
to bring any weapons, including legally permitted ones. During the first No
Kings Day in June, one Salt Lake City protester was killed and another was
injured by a local 50501 “peacekeeper” volunteer who saw the latter carrying a
firearm, even though doing so is legal under Utah law.
The White
House and Republican leadership denounced Saturday’s No Kings day events as
“Trump Derangement Therapy Sessions”. In a statement, White House spokesperson
Abigail Jackson said the demonstrations were created by “leftist funding
networks” and that “only people who care about these Trump Derangement Therapy
Sessions are the reporters who are paid to cover them.”
The Trump
administration has targeted and federally prosecuted anti-ICE protesters –
earlier this month, nine people were found guilty of charges of “antifa”
terrorism in a Texas trial over a Fourth of July demonstration outside a
detention facility. In January, Minneapolis residents Good and Pretti were
killed by federal immigration agents as they were documenting the agents’
activities.
During
the press conference on Thursday, organizers were asked about reports of ICE
agents putting boots on the ground at the protests – placing a higher level of
risk for undocumented and other marginalized protesters. (Last year, journalist
Mario Guevara was detained and ultimately deported after livestreaming the June
No Kings protest.) Deirdre Schifeling, American Civil Liberties Union’s chief
political and advocacy officer, advised that any threats of ICE presence were
an intimidation tactic and directed attenders to the “know your rights”
materials on the ACLU’s site.
Organizers
have repeatedly emphasized that No Kings Day is only one aspect of broader
efforts toward building people power and fighting the Trump administration –
and that that work “doesn’t end after March 28”.
“Our
third No Kings Day of Action will happen on Saturday, and Trump will still be
in the White House,” said Greenberg. “That is why we see No Kings as not only a
powerful day of defiance but an organizing catalyst to support local organizing
everywhere.”

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