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‘No Kings’ protesters pack city streets across the nation as crowds lash out against Trump
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- Millions of protesters gathered nationwide Saturday in “No Kings” rallies.
- Los Angeles organizers expected more than 100,000 participants across the region.
- Organizers noted unprecedented participation from rural and Republican communities, with Trump’s approval ratings at their lowest since his second term began.
A rolling wave of “No Kings” protests swelled through America’s small towns and big cities Saturday, with crowds gathering to blast President Trump, Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdowns, the war in Iran and high gas and food prices.
Saturday’s demonstrations were expected to draw millions of people nationwide, including thousands for a downtown Los Angeles rally. More than 40 protests were planned for L.A., Orange and Ventura counties, part of the national “No Kings Day of Nonviolent Action.”
No Kings Coalition organizers were hoping that turnout for the rallies in all 50 states could combine to form the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. They pointed to growing anger over the country’s direction, including fatal ICE shootings and troops dispatched to the Middle East, since the first “No Kings” demonstration was held last June.
Late Saturday, organizers estimated that at least 8 million people participated in 3,300 events held around the U.S. and overseas — an increase of 1 million demonstrators compared to the last “No Kings” event in October.
“I’m very disturbed by the degradation of human beings and the destruction of our democracy under this Trump tyranny,” said Rossana Foote, a 62-year-old Los Angeles Unified School District teacher, who traveled to the downtown protest from her Ventura County home.
“We need to come together to show a strong voice, a strong movement that there are no kings, no one’s above the law,” Foote said.
Earlier in the day, hundreds gathered around the reflecting pool at Pasadena City College. A band rolled through with a fascism-themed parody of Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues.” Sign-toting protesters lined Colorado Boulevard, drawing a constant stream of honking from the cars driving by. For many, the Iran war was top of mind.
“Every time we protest, there’s something completely new, which speaks to the chaos of the Trump administration,” Cindy Campbell told The Times. “ICE raids last year, Epstein files a few months ago. Now, war.”
41 ‘No Kings’ protests are planned throughout Los Angeles County on Saturday. Where to find a protest near you.
Organizers sought to build political momentum in advance of November’s elections, when voters could tip control of the U.S. House and potentially the Senate to Democrats. Local political issues were also on display Saturday. Volunteers wound through the Pasadena crowd, collecting signatures for a variety of ballot initiatives, including a controversial proposed tax on the ultra-rich.
“This administration doesn’t serve us. It serves billionaires,” said Kent Miller of Monrovia, who participated in the Pasadena protest. “War with Iran is only making life harder for working people.”
Miller pointed to a Chevron gas station advertising gas for $6.45 per gallon.
“See?” he said.
In among the earliest gatherings in the region, hundreds of demonstrators assembled around the reflecting pool at Pasadena City College at 10:30 a.m.
Los Angeles coordinators said they expected more than 100,000 people at the dozens of local events, which also were being planned for Beverly Hills, Burbank, Venice Beach, Newport Beach, West Covina, West Hollywood and Thousand Oaks. One group planned a “Road Outrage” car caravan to motor through Mid City with flapping flags calling for “No War” and “ICE Out of LA.”
At a large gathering in Torrance, cars honked and a person in an inflatable green cow costume hoisted a large American flag. Protesters in Huntington Beach lifted cutout images of Trump and Stephen Miller, a key policy advisor. Nearby, another sign read: “IKEA has better Cabinets.”
In Monterey Park, dozens gathered at the intersection of Atlantic Boulevard and Rigging Street about noon, sharing a diversity of causes. Young Wang, a local organizer, spoke against a proposed 250,000-square-foot data center in Monterey Park.
The sentiment is shared by others in California and Arizona who are wary of the massive electricity-intensive installations under construction to generate computing power needed to run artificial intelligence.
“I want to make sure that I stand up because my role as an American-born Chinese is to make sure the community, which is majority immigrants, has a voice to say what’s going on in our town,” Wang said.
Monterey Park resident Carol Ono, 77, said she and her 78-year-old husband, Thomas Ono, showed up “because there really needs to be a fundamental change in our country.”
Ono said they were troubled by the treatment of vulnerable populations by Trump and his administration.
“We have the Japanese American experience of people being put into camps, even though they were citizens,” she said, voicing concern about conditions at federal immigration detention facilities. “It’s really important for history not to repeat that same mistake.”
The White House, in a Saturday statement, dismissed the protests as a “Trump Derangement Therapy Session.”
The National Republican Congressional Committee also scoffed at the events.
“These Hate America Rallies are where the far left’s most violent, deranged fantasies get a microphone,” Maureen O’Toole, spokesperson for the Republican group, told the Associated Press.
In Hannibal, Mo., protesters reported that some motorists flipped them off. In Huntington Beach, one driver waiting at the stoplight at Pacific Coast Highway and Main Street yelled: “There is no king, you [expletive] idiots!”
“This is a president that is ignoring the Constitution,” responded Gary Holtz, who helped organize the Huntington Beach rally.
“He’s ignoring the courts. He’s doing whatever he wants, and that’s indicative of a dictator or a king,” Holtz said. “We, the people, have to stand up, or we, the people, won’t have a democracy.”
The White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson described the protests as the product of “leftist funding networks” with little real public support.
National coordinators, however, said they have been encouraged by a surge of interest from groups in rural communities that wanted to join the loose-knit No Kings Coalition and hold protests. Events sprouted in Republican bastions, and some organizers reported that attendance was higher than expected.
“I’m out here because I’m disgusted with what I’m seeing,” said Kersty Kinsey, a mother who was protesting near the Beaufort, S.C., City Hall. “People are suffering, and he’s playing golf. People are suffering, and he’s going other places and blowing things up.”
In Beaufort, founded in 1711, an estimated 3,000 people turned out — a marked increase over earlier “No Kings” rallies, said Barb Nash, one of the local coordinators. Amid the moss-draped live oaks and blooming pink and white azaleas, a person in a purple Barney dinosaur costume held a sign reading: “Dino’s for Democracy.” A young girl handed out homemade “Resistance Cookies.”
It was Kinsey’s first time at a “No Kings” rally, but she felt it was important to express her discontent.
“There’s nothing good coming out of that administration, not from the president on down,” Kinsey said. “Our local senators are a disgrace here in South Carolina. ... I’m tired of waking up and having a feeling of dread to turn on the TV to see what happened overnight.”
Demonstrations were held across the nation after the killing of intensive care nurse Alex Pretti. ‘We stand with Minneapolis, but we know ICE’s terrorism isn’t limited to Minneapolis,’ said one L.A. protester.
Jaynie Parrish, founder of the Arizona Native Vote project, started planning a protest for her tiny town of Kayenta, on the Navajo Nation in northern Arizona, only earlier this week.
“My dad, who’s a [military] veteran and an elder, said, ‘We should go,’ and I said, ‘OK,’” Parrish told The Times.
“Our folks don’t always protest for things, but this was very important,” Parrish said. “A lot of our families are feeling the impacts right now of higher prices and things being cut. A lot of our healthcare benefits are being cut ... and our tribal sovereignty is being threatened.”
Her tiny collective, family and friends stood on a parched highway intersection in this corner of a high desert. They waved signs, including one that read: “Make America Native Again.” Her 82-year-old father held another that read: “No Kings on the Rez.”
Upbeat Midwestern activists withstood whipping winds to form a line of protesters stretching for nearly three blocks of Burlington Avenue in Hastings, Neb. Under the crisp blue skies, one of the protesters, Drew Fausett, told The Times in a phone interview that he is a registered Republican in the decidedly red state.
“My politics haven’t really changed — but the party around me has,” Fausett said. “It used to be the two parties were two sides of the same coin, and they would work together — but not anymore.”
He and his wife, Becky, have attended No Kings and other protests because “it’s the only way to show that people have different opinions,” he said. “People are out here speaking for their families and their neighbors. That’s what this is all about.”
Trump’s policies have been hurting many in Nebraska — including farmers, said Debby Thompson, one of the Hastings organizers.
“We want to urge our representatives in Congress to not just rubber-stamp whatever Trump wants because it’s really hurting rural folks and farmers,” Thompson said. “The tariffs and huge increase in prices on fertilizer are hitting farmers really hard.”
The No Kings campaign sprouted in June as an act of defiance on Trump’s 79th birthday. He wanted a military parade in Washington to mark his milestone, and anti-Trump protesters came out in force — an estimated 5 million people around the country — with their own display. At the time, Trump’s second-term policies were coming into focus, including ramping up immigration raids, deploying the National Guard to L.A. in response to protests, and mass firings within the federal government.
A subsequent event in mid-October drew even larger crowds, with an estimated 7 million people protesting around the country.
“The defining story of this Saturday’s mobilization is not just how many people are protesting — but where they are protesting,” Leah Greenberg, co-founder of Indivisible, said during a Thursday media briefing. Two-thirds of the RSVPs to national organizers came from outside major urban centers, she said.
Saturday’s event coincided with a dip in Trump’s approval ratings.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll last week found that 36% approve of Trump’s job performance, marking the lowest level since his return to office last year. In a Fox News Poll released last week, 59% disapproved of his job performance.
“Since the last No Kings, we’re seeing higher gas prices and groceries, all while there’s an illegal war in Iran,” national organizer Sarah Parker of the organization 50501 said during the briefing. “We’ve also seen our neighbors executed — American citizens executed.”
Widespread protests and candlelight vigils followed January’s fatal shootings by immigration agents in Minneapolis of Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, and Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care unit nurse.
Thousands of people gathered at Minnesota’s state Capitol building in St. Paul for a rally that included Gov. Tim Walz, who said the region was still feeling the pain of Immigration and Customs Enforcement activities and the deaths of Good and Pretti.
Column: Facts about Alex Pretti’s death are undeniable. The White House is denying them anyway.
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The Los Angeles event was organized by the local chapter of 50501 (short for “50 protests, 50 states, 1 movement”) and other progressive groups, including the ACLU, Human Rights Campaign, Indivisible and Public Citizen, as well as labor unions such as Unite Here Local 11 and the Service Workers International Union.
Gary Thornton, a retired federal worker and veteran who served in the U.S. Army from 1978 to 1985, participated in the Monterey Park event to protest the war in Iran. He said Trump should have sought congressional approval before launching strikes.
“I’ve worked for Uncle Sam for almost 40 years, and this is a nightmare,” said Thornton, 68. “I swore an oath to the Constitution that I would protect and defend it. To have someone acting like a dictator now, it basically laughs at everything I did for 40 years.”
Nationwide protests take place Friday as part of a ‘National Shutdown’ in response to immigration actions in Minnesota. Protesters clashed with police.
Times staff writer Andrew Turner contributed to this report.

Facts Only

Millions of protesters gathered nationwide on Saturday for "No Kings" rallies.
Over 100,000 participants were expected in Los Angeles County alone.
Protests occurred in all 50 states and overseas, with 3,300 events estimated.
Organizers reported 8 million participants, up from 7 million in October.
Demonstrations targeted President Trump, ICE policies, the Iran war, and economic issues.
Rural and Republican communities showed unprecedented participation.
The White House called the protests "Trump Derangement Therapy."
Republican officials described them as "Hate America Rallies."
Trump’s approval ratings dropped to 36%, the lowest since his second term began.
Protests followed recent ICE shootings in Minneapolis, including the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
Events included diverse causes, such as opposition to a data center in Monterey Park.
Some protesters linked current policies to historical injustices, like Japanese American internment.

Executive Summary

Millions of protesters participated in "No Kings" rallies across the U.S. on Saturday, with events in all 50 states and overseas. Organizers estimated at least 8 million people joined 3,300 demonstrations, making it potentially the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. The rallies targeted President Trump’s policies, including ICE crackdowns, the war in Iran, and rising gas and food prices. Notable participation came from rural and Republican communities, signaling broad discontent. Protests ranged from major cities like Los Angeles, where over 100,000 were expected, to smaller towns like Beaufort, South Carolina, and Kayenta on the Navajo Nation. The White House dismissed the protests as "Trump Derangement Therapy," while Republican officials labeled them "Hate America Rallies." The demonstrations coincided with Trump’s lowest approval ratings since his second term began, with polls showing 36% approval and 59% disapproval. Protesters also highlighted recent ICE shootings and economic hardships, with some linking their concerns to historical injustices like Japanese American internment.

Full Take

The "No Kings" protests represent a significant escalation in public dissent, with organizers framing the movement as a defense of democracy against perceived authoritarianism. The strongest version of this narrative highlights genuine grievances—rising costs, unchecked executive power, and fatal ICE actions—while emphasizing grassroots mobilization across political divides. However, the sheer scale and emotional intensity of the protests raise questions about potential manipulation patterns. The White House’s dismissal of the events as "Trump Derangement Therapy" and Republican labeling of "Hate America Rallies" suggest a classic polarization tactic, where critics are framed as irrational or unpatriotic rather than engaging with substantive concerns. Meanwhile, the protests’ focus on multiple issues—from war to economic hardship—could risk diluting their message, though it also reflects the interconnected nature of public discontent.
Root causes include deepening distrust in institutions, economic strain, and a perceived erosion of democratic norms. The historical parallels drawn by protesters, such as Japanese American internment, underscore a fear of repeating past injustices. The implications for human agency are profound: while the protests demonstrate civic engagement, they also reveal a fractured society where dialogue is increasingly replaced by performative outrage. Who benefits? Opposition groups gain momentum ahead of elections, while Trump’s base may further entrench. Second-order consequences could include heightened political violence or legislative gridlock.
Bridge questions: How might these protests reshape electoral strategies in November? What would it take for either side to engage in meaningful dialogue rather than mutual demonization? Are there policy solutions that address the protesters’ concerns without deepening division?
Counterstrike scan: If this were a coordinated influence campaign, the playbook would involve amplifying emotional triggers (e.g., ICE shootings, war) to mobilize opposition while dismissing critics as extremists. The actual content aligns with this pattern to some extent, particularly in the framing of protests as a binary struggle between democracy and tyranny. However, the diversity of participant voices and local issues suggests organic grassroots energy rather than a top-down operation.
Patterns detected: ARC-0024 Ambiguity (broad, multi-issue framing), ARC-0043 Motte-and-Bailey (protests as "defense of democracy" vs. specific policy critiques).

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

Sentinel analysis incomplete — partial response from fallback model.