This was published 5 months ago
Millions march for ‘No Kings’ in biggest protest against Trump to date
Washington: Millions of Americans have taken to the streets across the country in what is believed to be the largest co-ordinated demonstration against US President Donald Trump and his government since he took office in January.
More than 2600 rallies were planned nationwide on Saturday, US time, with protesters decrying what they believe to be an authoritarian, anti-democratic administration that has sidelined the Constitution, due process, equality and fairness.
In the capital, Washington, DC, multiple marches converged on Pennsylvania Avenue, the grand boulevard that links the US Capitol with the White House and many of the nation’s most important institutions.
Thousands carried signs denouncing Trump, or dressed up to illustrate their point. One man dressed as God walked down the National Mall saying “no Trumps in heaven”, while another was dressed as a baby version of Trump, painted in orange, wearing a nappy and carrying a king’s sceptre.
Andy Ravenna and Kevin Rehac of nearby Arlington, Virginia, carried signs that said, “Bring back checks and balances” and “So bad even the introverts are here”. They said this “No Kings” protest felt like the biggest yet.
“He’s destroying democracy,” Ravenna said of Trump. “Everything that he’s done since he’s been in office, he’s been destroying everything that we’ve known this country to be: good and secure and a safe haven for everybody.”
Another man, Scott, carried a sign that pinned the blame on Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News. Fearful of being put on a list of agitators, he declined to give his last name and kept his face behind a mask and sunglasses.
Rehac said the large crowds were heartening to see for opponents of Trump, who still struggled to accept that their fellow countrymen had voted for a person who attempted to overthrow the results of an election. “It’s absolutely antithetical to everything that the country stands for,” he said.
“It’s just incredible what’s going on in America, and I do blame – believe it or not – Fox News. We’ve had 30 years of poisoning against the American mind, poisoning against the government, and it leads to these kinds of outcomes. Thanks, Rupert.”
This is the third mass mobilisation since Trump’s return to the White House and comes against the backdrop of a government shutdown that not only has closed federal programs and services, but is testing the core balance of power as an aggressive executive confronts Congress and the courts.
The US government has been shut down for 18 days as Senate Democrats and Republicans remain dug in over extending health care subsidies, a roadblock to a spending bill that would reopen the government.
Long-serving Vermont senator Bernie Sanders, who at 84 remains one of the leaders of the American progressive movement, said Republicans had falsely tried to paint the weekend’s protests as hateful and anti-American.
“Millions of Americans are coming out today not because they hate America – we’re here because we love America,” he told the Washington crowd.
“As I understand, today, October 18th, 2025, there are more people out on the streets in more communities all over our country than we have ever seen in American history. This is not the end, this is just the beginning.”
Sanders said Trump was amassing more and more power in his own hands and those of his “fellow oligarchs”, particularly as his administration targeted protests in Portland or Chicago as “insurrections”, intimidated the media and indicted its political enemies.
Trump was not in Washington on the weekend but playing golf at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida. He told Fox News the protesters were mistaken about him.
“They’re referring to me as a king. I’m not a king,” he said.
Earlier, House of Representatives speaker Mike Johnson called the No Kings protests a “hate America rally” by Antifa, Marxists and pro-Hamas activists.
“It is an outrageous gathering for outrageous purposes … all this has got to come to an end,” he said.
Elsewhere, demonstrators packed New York City’s Times Square, Boston Common, Chicago’s Grant Park and hundreds of smaller public spaces.
More than 1500 people gathered in Birmingham, Alabama, evoking and openly citing the city’s history of protests and the critical role it played in the US Civil Rights Movement two generations ago.
“Big rallies like this give confidence to people who have been sitting on the sidelines but are ready to speak up,” Democratic senator Chris Murphy said in an interview with The Associated Press.
With AP
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