Draft:No Kings Protests- restructuring with tables
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No Kings Day Protests | |
---|---|
Part of Protests against Donald Trump and 50501 movement[1] | |
Date | June 14, 2025 |
Location | ~2,000 cities and locations |
Caused by | |
Methods | Protest |
Status | Finished |
Casualties | |
Injuries | 2 in separate car attacks in California and Virginia,
|
The No Kings protests (also known as No Kings Day or No Dictators Day/protests) were a series of demonstrations that took place on June 14, 2025,[2][3] the day of the U.S. Army 250th Anniversary Parade and the 79th birthday of U.S. president Donald Trump, in protest of Trump's policies and actions during his second presidency.[4] It is estimated that over five million people participated in over 2,000 events nationwide in the largest coordinated protests since the start of the second Trump administration.[5][6][7]
Background
[edit]The No Kings protests were aimed at opposing the policies and actions of the Donald Trump administration. Due to the parade coinciding with President Trump's 79th birthday, anti-Trump activists have interpreted the event as an example of Trump using the US Armed Forces to conduct an authoritarian or king-like celebration of himself. The protests followed several days of demonstrations against ICE raids across the US,[a] including in Los Angeles, where Trump deployed both the California National Guard and the US Marine Corps.[9][10] The American Federation of Teachers and Communications Workers of America, organized the protests.[11][12] The No Kings theme was created by the 50501 movement, and derives its name from the perceived authoritarian or tyrannical behavior of Trump and his administration. Critics and activists have compared Trump to an absolute monarch due to his defiance of court orders, extralegal deportations, and perceived disregard for civil rights.[9] Democrats Abroad organized solidarity protests internationally with the term of "No Tyrants",[13] as many countries have monarchs as heads of state. Its message was, "We reject authoritarianism. We reject fear. We reject tyrants."[13]
Trump publicly opposed the demonstrations and stated that protestors interfering with the parade itself would be "met with heavy force".[14][15][16]
List of Locations
[edit]Protests by U.S. State
[edit]State | Protest | Estimated attendance | Notes | Photo |
---|---|---|---|---|
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Mobile | ~2,000 | [17]; In Mobile, organizers reported receiving threats ahead of the rally;[18] | |
Montgomery | 400+ | across from the State Capitol.[19] | ||
Tuscaloosa | 100+ | Several hundred attended the No Kings rally in Tuscaloosa outside the Richard Shelby Federal Building and Courthouse.[20] | ||
Other | Six cities in North Alabama hosted demonstrations: Huntsville, Florence, Scottsboro, Fort Payne, Guntersville, and Athens.[21] | |||
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Anchorage | 1,000+ | Thousands attended the No Kings demonstration in downtown Anchorage.[22] | |
Fairbanks | ~2,000 | Approximately 2,000 people rallied outside Pioneer Park in Fairbanks.[23] | ||
Homer | ~600 | Demonstrations drew approximately 600 people in Homer | ||
Sitka | ~300 | 300 people in Sitka.[22] | ||
Other | There were also 14 other demonstrations elsewhere in Alaska.[24] | |||
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Phoenix | ~20,000 | ~20,000 people rallied at the Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza outside the State Capitol in Phoenix despite extreme heat [25] | |
Tuscon | 1,000+ | Thousands rallied in Tuscon [26] | ||
Flagstaff | 3,000+ | 3,000+ people attended rallies in Flagstaff [27] | ||
Other | Thousands of people protested at more than 40 events in Arizona [28][25] | |||
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Fayetteville | ~5,000 | ~5,000 participated in Fayetteville[29] | |
Little Rock | 8,000+ | 8,000+ gathered in Little Rock.[30][31][32] | ||
Other | Multiple other protests were planned in Arkansas.[33] | |||
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San Francisco | ~50,000 | ~50,000 people protested in San Francisco [34][35] | |
San Diego | ~60,000 | ~60,000 people protested in San Diego demonstration [36] | ||
Los Angeles City Hall | ~200,000 | ~200,000 protested outside of Los Angeles City Hall [37] | ||
Other | Other rallies occurred in Fresno,[38] Los Angeles,[39][40][41][42][43] Pasadena,[44] Santa Barbara,[45] Sacramento,[46] Santa Monica,[47] Monterey,[48] Berkeley,[49] and Oakland.[49] | |||
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Colorado Springs | 1000 | Thousands rallied in downtown Colorado Springs, with crowds lining the sidewalk for nearly a mile from City Hall to Colorado College.[50] | |
Denver | 1000 | Thousands attended the rally in Denver.[51] | ||
Other | Dozens of events occurred in Colorado,[52] in locations ranging from large cities to small towns.[53][54][55][56]
Some of the largest Colorado rallies outside of Denver occurred in Boulder and Fort Collins, with thousands attending in each city.[57] | |||
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Hartford | 9,000+ | 9,000–10,000 in Hartford.[58][59][60] | |
Other | Approximately 30 events were planned in Connecticut.[61] | |||
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Dover | 100 | Hundreds of people gathered in Dover, Delaware.[62] | |
Other | There was also a protest which gathered several thousands in Wilmington.[63] | |||
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Tallahassee | ~1,000 | In North Florida, an estimated 1,000 people protested in Tallahassee [64] | |
Jacksonville | more than 1 | In Jacksonville, residents protested on Beach Boulevard [65] and downtown at the Duval County Courthouse [66] | ||
Cocoa and Palm Bay | 2,000+ | 2,000+ people protested in Cocoa and Palm Bay [67] | ||
Vero Beach | ~2,000 | About 2,000 people gathered in Vero Beach [68] | ||
St. Petersburg | 1,000+ | 1,000+ people attended the St. Petersburg protest [69] | ||
Sarasota | ~7,000 | 7,000 people attending a protest at J.D. Hamel Park in Sarasota [70] | ||
Venice | ~2,000 | 2,000 people in Venice [70] | ||
Ellenton | ~750 | 750 near Rocky Bluff Library in Ellenton [70] | ||
West Palm Beach | 1000 | thousands of protesters marched for nearly 2 miles from Phipps Skate Park in West Palm Beach to Mar-a-Lago.[71][72] | ||
Coral Springs | ~1,000 | An estimated 1,000 protested at the intersection of Sample Road and University Blvd in Coral Springs.[72][73] | ||
Fort Lauderdale | 2,000+ | Over 2,000 people protested in Fort Lauderdale.[64] | ||
Miami | ~2,000 | Another 2,000 people protested at Freedom Tower in downtown Miami.[73] | ||
Miami Beach | 100 | Hundreds of protesters marched along the sidewalks of Pride Park in Miami Beach.[72][73] | ||
Other | The protest originally planned at North Young Circle in Hollywood was cancelled.[72]Other Protests [71][72][74][75][76] | |||
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Atlanta | 8,000+ | Over 5,000 people protested outside the State Capitol in Atlanta, with 3,000 more outside Liberty Plaza.[77][78][79] | |
Other | Protests were planned in cities throughout the state, including Albany, Athens, Augusta, Brunswick, Columbus, Macon, Savannah, Valdosta, and Waycross.[80] | |||
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Other | In Hawaii, protests were planned in Hilo, Kailua-Kona, Na‘alehu, Waimea.[81]
The protests were instead called 'No Dictator Day' in Hawaii to avoid confusions with the locals who were celebrating the annual King Kamehameha Day parade, and to avoid offending the overthrown Hawaiian Kingdom.[82] |
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Boise | 1000 | Thousands of people gathered at the Idaho State Capitol.[83] | |
Pocatello | ~1,500 | 1,500 in Pocatello | ||
Idaho Falls | ~1,300 | 1,300 in Idaho Falls | ||
Driggs | 500+ | 500 to 600 in Driggs.[84] | ||
Other | Protests were planned in 15 cities across Idaho, including Boise, Nampa, and Coeur d'Alene.[85] | |||
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Springfield | 1,000+ | Over 1,000 people took part in a protest in Springfield, the Illinois capital, and marched from the Capitol grounds to the Old State Capitol.[86] | |
Other | In Illinois, protests were planned in Chicago[87][88] and elsewhere.[89] | |||
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South Bend | 2,000+ | Approximately 2,000 people gathered in South Bend.[90] | |
Other | Approximately 30 protests were planned in Indiana, including Bloomington, Evansville, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis,[91] Kokomo, Lafayette, Muncie, South Bend,[92] and Terre Haute.[93] | |||
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Cedar Rapids | 1,000+ | 1,000+ in Cedar Rapids | |
Des Moines and Iowa City | 7,000+ | 7,000+ in Des Moines,[94][95] and Iowa City.[96] | ||
Other | In Iowa, thousands attended[97] approximately 30 to 35 protests,[98][99] including over | |||
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Topeka | 2,000+ | In Kansas, a protest took place in Topeka at the Kansas State Capitol, attracting an estimated crowd of over 2,000 people.[100][101][102] | |
Other | Other protests took place in Great Bend,[103] Hays,[104] Lenexa,[105][106] Garden City,[107] Lawrence,[108][109], Wichita.[110] and Pittsburg.[111] | |||
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Louisville | ~4,000 | In Kentucky, 4,000 attended a protest in Louisville.[112][113] | |
Other | Thousands gathered in Lexington in front of the Fayette County Courthouse.[114] | |||
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New Orleans | 1,000+ | Thousands of people gathered in New Orleans[115][116][117] | |
Baton Rouge | 400+ | 400–500 people attended a protest in Baton Rouge.[118][119] | ||
Other | There were also protests in Shreveport[120], Lafayette[121], and Alexandria.[122] | |||
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3,000+
12+ Events |
In Maine, more than 12 demonstrations were planned.[123] There was a protest in Portland,[124] which drew thousands, and a protest in Augusta gathered about 3,000.[125] | ||
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There were protests in Maryland.[126][127][128] Demonstrations were organized in Baltimore City, Annapolis, Bel Air, Columbia, Westminster, and other communities across the state.[129] | |||
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1,000,000+ | In Massachusetts, organizers estimated that more than 1,000,000 people joined the converging Boston Pride for the People parade and No Kings march at Boston Common.[130] Numerous other Massachusetts cities (over 100 according to one report[131]) held protests, including in Western Massachusetts[132], Central Massachusetts[133], Southeastern Massachusetts[134], and Cape Cod[131] | ||
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21,350+ | Dozens of No Kings demonstrations took place in Michigan,[135][136] and organizers estimated that the Ann Arbor rally drew nearly 8,000 participants.[136]
Thousands rallied at Clark Park in Detroit, with some later joining a march to the Rosa Parks Federal Building.[137] Approximately 4,000 people rallied in Ferndale, a Detroit suburb.[138][139] Other Metro Detroit demonstrations took place at Livonia, Dearborn, Farmington Hills, Troy, Novi, Roseville, and elsewhere.[140] Thousands attended the No Kings demonstration at the east lawn at the state Capitol in Lansing.[141] In Western Michigan, demonstrators gathered in Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, as well as smaller cities.[142] In Northern Michigan, organizers cited attendance of 7,000 at the No Kings rally in Traverse City, and an estimated 1,500 attended the No Kings rally in Petoskey.[143][144] Smaller-scale demonstrations occurred in Three Rivers (more than 350 attendees), Gaylord (300 attendees) and Monroe (200 attendees).[145] Other events occurred in Elk Rapids, Charlevoix, and Boyne City.[146] In the Upper Peninsula, thousands protested in Marquette. [147] There was also a protest in Sault Ste. Marie. [148] |
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In Minnesota, events in Anoka and northeast Minneapolis were cancelled by organizers due to a shelter-in-place warning and concerns with safety after the shootings of two state lawmakers.[149][150] Flyers for No Kings protests were found in the gunman's vehicle. Events were later officially cancelled statewide, though the protest at the Minnesota State Capitol in Saint Paul was still held, albeit without governor Tim Walz as a speaker.[151][152][153] | |||
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2,000+ | Over 1,500 people gathered at the Mississippi State Capitol in Jackson.[154] In Gulfport, more than 500 people attended the rally.[155] | ||
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5,000+ | In Missouri, No Kings protests took place in at least 30 cities.[156][157] Thousands gathered at a dozen rallies across the St. Louis area, including at Kiener Plaza in downtown St. Louis.[158] In Kansas City, organizers estimated more than 2,000 attendees rallied at Country Club Plaza.[159] Over 2,000 people participated in protests in Springfield,[160] and more than 1,000 attendees attended the rally at the State Capitol in Jefferson City.[161]
Other rallies occurred in Boonville,[162] Columbia,[163] Fayette,[162] Belleville,[158] Manchester, St. Peters, Sappington, Alton,[164] Carthage, and Joplin.[165] |
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3,000+ | Thousands protested in Montana,[166] including in Great Falls[167] and Missoula.[168] Approximately 3,000 people gathered in Bozeman.[169][170] | ||
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~2,900 | Nebraska saw demonstrations in thirteen cities.[171][172] Crowd estimates were around 2,500 in Lincoln, more than 200 in Hastings, between 150 and 200 in North Platte.[171] | ||
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There were protests in Nevada,[173][174][175] including in Las Vegas.[176] Other protests outside of Las Vegas took place in various town, cities and even highways such as Kietzke Lane, Reno, Carson City, Elko and Hawthorne. The protests in Northern Nevada were mostly organized by the Indivisible Movement and sponsored by the Nevada Labor Union, Third Act Movement, and Blue Band Alliance.[177][174] | |||
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~8,000 | In New Hampshire, demonstrations were planned in Keene, Concord, Portsmouth, Dover, Colebrook, Littleton, and other communities across the state.[178] Organizers estimated that protests in Concord drew between 5,000 and 8,000 people.[179] | ||
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Multiple demonstrations were planned in New Jersey.[180][181][182] Thousands attended the Morristown protest.[183] | |||
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1,200+ | People gathered and marched in more than a dozen places in New Mexico, including at least 1,200 in Santa Fe and thousands in Albuquerque.[184] | ||
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200,000+ | Many protests were planned in New York,[185] including in New York City.[186] Bryant Park was the gathering point for the largest of the demonstrations planned for New York City,[187] where an estimated 200,000 gathered in and then marched down Fifth Avenue to Madison Square Park.[188][189] | ![]() | |
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In North Carolina, protests were held in Charlotte and multiple Charlotte suburbs such as Concord.[190][191] In the Research Triangle, protests were held in Raleigh, Durham, and Cary.[192] In the Triad, protests were held in Lexington, High Point, and Winston-Salem.[193] In Wilmington, there was a protest at which state representative Deb Butler spoke.[194] Other cities with protests were Fayetteville, Greenville, and Asheville.[195][196][197] | |||
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North Dakota saw thousands of people participate in ten demonstrations,[198] including one in Fargo.[199] | |||
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4,000+ | In Ohio, protests were held in Dayton,[200] Akron,[201] Cleveland,[202] Clintonville, Youngstown[203], Hilliard, Grove City, Pickerington, Mansfield, Zanesville, Westerville, and many other cities across the state.[204] Thousands marched in downtown Cleveland, cheering as cars honked in support. The demonstration in downtown Columbus was part of the Stonewall Columbus Pride March.[205] Protests were also held in the Cincinnati Greater Metropolitan Area.[206] Hundreds of people also gathered outside the Ohio Statehouse on June 13.[207][208]
In Summit County, an estimated three thousand protestors demonstrated in Akron,[209] while over a thousand lined both sides of Front Street in Cuyahoga Falls, chanting while holding umbrellas in the rain.[210][211] In Portage County, more than a thousand demonstrators gathered in Kent.[201] Over two dozen gathered in neighboring Ravenna.[212] Portage County Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski was one of the first Ohio sheriffs to enter into an agreement with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, authorizing sheriff's deputies the authority to interrogate anyone suspected of being in the United States without proper documentation and arrest such individuals without a warrant.[213] |
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In Oklahoma, protestors gathered in both Oklahoma City[214] and Tulsa.[215] Thousands attended the Oklahoma City demonstration.[216] | |||
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1,000+ | In Oregon, demonstrations were planned in Albany, Astoria, Beaverton, Bend, Clackamas,[217] Corvallis, Eugene, Florence, Grants Pass, Happy Valley, La Grande, Lincoln City, Madras, McMinnvile,[218] Medford, Newberg,[218] Newport, Portland, Prineville, Roseburg, Salem, and Tillamook.[219][220]
Thousands attended the protest in Eugene.[221] There was also a protest in Gresham.[222] In Portland,[223][224] demonstrations were planned at Salmon Street Springs and Tom McCall Waterfront Park, as well as the Oregon Convention Center and Westmoreland Park in southeast Portland's Sellwood-Moreland neighborhood.[225] Hundreds gathered at the Oregon Convention Center.[226] Approximately 1,000 people attended the Salem protest.[227] |
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~80,000 | In Pennsylvania, demonstrations were planned in Erie,[228] Philadelphia,[229] and Pittsburgh.[230] Protests were also planned in Harrisburg, Carlisle, Chambersburg, Lewistown, Mifflintown, Norristown, Gettysburg, York, and Lancaster.[231]
An estimated 80,000 people gathered in Philadelphia.[232] |
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~5,500 | In Providence, the chief of police estimated an attendance of more than 3,000 people at the rally at the State House, and more than 1,000 at a demonstration later in the afternoon at India Point Park.[233] An estimated 1,000 people joined the protests in Westerly.[234] Approximately 500 people attended the No Kings rally in South Kingstown and around 100 attended a rally on Block Island.[235] Other rallies took place in Middletown and Warren.[235] | ||
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1,000+ | Thousands of people participated in protests in South Carolina.[236][237][238] Approximately 1,000 people gathered in Charleston.[239] Other protests included the cities and towns of Greenville, Spartanburg, Greenwood, Rock Hill, Pendleton, Seneca and Columbia. The Greenville protest in particular was organized by the Greenville Progressive Coalition, which includes the Indivisible Upstate SC, 50501, and "We the People" under the name "Valor Over Vanity". Despite the change in name, Michelle Shara the Upstate representative for 50501, stated that the protest in Greenville was part of the "No Kings National Day" struggle and in conjuction with it.[240] | ||
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No Kings protests were held in Rapid City, Spearfish, Pierre, Chamberlain, Watertown, Brookings, and Sioux Falls.[241] | |||
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8,500+ | In Tennessee, at least a thousand people gathered in Nashville.[242][243] At least one person was arrested.[244] The Tri-Cities had the No Kings protests and was called "No Kings Kingsport".[245] Protests were also held in Memphis,[246] Chattanooga,[247] and Knoxville. An estimated 7,500 attended the Knoxville protest.[248][249] | ||
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In Texas, demonstrations were planned in Austin[250][251] and Houston.[252][253] Elsewhere in Greater Houston, protests were planned in Conroe, Cypress,[254] Katy, Kingwood, League City, Sugar Land, and The Woodlands.[255][256] Protests were also planned in East Texas.[257] Governor Abbott deployed approximately 5,000 Texas National Guard troops and 2,000 state police across the state in preparation.[258]
Approximately fifteen demonstrations were held in North Texas, including in Arlington, Burleson, Carrollton, Collin County, Dallas, Denton, Flower Mound, Fort Worth, Frisco, Greenville, Kaufman, McKinney, Sanger, Sherman, and Weatherford.[259] Thousands of people participated in North Texas demonstrations.[260] 15,000 people protested in downtown Houston.[261] There was also protests in McAllen,[citation needed] San Antonio,[262] Amarillo,[263] Lubbock,[264] Laredo,[265] and El Paso.[266] |
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In Utah, protests took place in Salt Lake City, Provo, Logan, Ogden, St. George, Moab, Park City, Kanab, Heber City, Ephraim, Boulder, and Price.[267][268][269]
In the evening, at least 10,000 people gathered in Salt Lake City's Pioneer Park for a rally followed by a march through downtown.[268] One protestor was "critically injured" in a shooting during the march.[270][269][271] |
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In Stowe, U.S. senator Bernie Sanders[272] joined more than 500 people at a No Kings Day protest.[273] In Burlington, more than 16,000 people were at the protest.[274] Several hundred attended a rally in Saint Johnsbury organized by Indivisible. According to organizers, approximately 1,000 people in Bennington showed up to create a human sign reading “No Kings!"[275] | |||
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Approximately 50 protests were planned in Virginia, including in the cities of Charlottesville, Louisa, Virginia Beach, Petersburg, Staunton, Richmond, and Williamsburg.[276] Hundreds gathered in Chesapeake, Lynchburg, and Roanoke.[277][278][279]
A man drove into a crowd in Culpeper County.[280] |
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77,200+ | In Seattle, over 70,000 protesters marched from Capitol Hill through Downtown Seattle to the Seattle Center in one of the city's largest-ever protests.[281][282] A demonstration also took place on the inbound Seattle–Bainbridge Island ferry aboard MV Kaleetan with former governor Jay Inslee among the speakers.[283] Over 5,000 people demonstrated outside the State Capitol in Olympia.[284] Demonstrations were also held in suburban Pierce and Snohomish counties, including a large protest along Broadway in Everett and at People's Park in Tacoma.[285][286] Over 2,200 people in Union Gap participated in the event by lining a busy intersection and engaging in a "honk-and-wave" form of protest.[287] In Bellingham, thousands of people joined to protest in front of the city hall.[288][289]
Protests were also scheduled in Vancouver,[290] Spokane,[291] as well as in Whatcom and Skagit counties.[292] |
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In West Virginia, protests were planned in Berkeley Springs, Bluefield, Buckhannon, Charleston, Elkins, Huntington, Morgantown, Martinsburg, Lewisburg, Romney, Shepherdstown, and Wheeling.[293] | |||
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15,000+ | In Wisconsin, thousands gathered in Milwaukee and over 15,000 in Madison, gathering on the University of Wisconsin–Madison campus before marching to the Wisconsin State Capitol.[294] | ||
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~900 | About 600 people demonstrated in Casper, while between 225 and 300 people attended a rally at Jackson's town square. More than 60 gathered in Alpine.[295] Other protests took place in Buffalo, Cheyenne, Cody, Gillette, Lander, Laramie, Pinedale, Rock Springs, Sheridan and Worland.[296] |
Protests in U.S. Territories
[edit]Territory | Estimated attendance | Notes | Photo |
---|---|---|---|
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A protest in Guam, organized by environment and culture direct action group Prutehi Guåhan,[297] took place at a major intersection near Micronesia Mall in Dededo.[298][299] Former Guam senator and now Public Auditor BJ Cruz, issued a statement regarding the protests and the situation, stating that the deployment of military forces within U.S. borders was unconstitutional.[299] | ||
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A protest was planned to take place in Saipan, the capital of the Northern Mariana Islands.[300] | ||
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In Puerto Rico, a No Kings protest was organized in Viejo San Juan.[301][302] | ||
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Various protests took place in the U.S Virgin Islands, in places such as St. Thomas and St. John. The St. John organizers worked alongside the Indivisible movement to organize the event.[303][304][305] |
International Protests
[edit]Country | Estimated attendance | Notes | Photo |
---|---|---|---|
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In Canada,[306] a protest occurred in Vancouver.[307][308] Another demonstration occurred in front of the embassy of the United States in Ottawa under the banner of "No Tyrants".[309] | ||
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In the Czech Republic, approximately 200 people gathered in Prague’s Jan Palach Square. The protest was organized by Democrats Abroad and the International Unitarian Church of Prague. The title of the protest was dubbed the "No Tyrants protest".[310][311] | ||
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In Finland, a protest was planned at Helsinki's Citizen’s Square.[310][312] | ||
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In France, several hundreds marched in Paris,[313] and about a hundred in Nice.[314] | ||
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In Germany,[315] several protests were planned for Berlin[316] and Hamburg,[317] while in Frankfurt, 200 people rallied at Opernplatz.[318] | ![]() | |
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In Italy, protests took place in Florence, Via dei Gondi and in Turin, in Carignano square. The protests were organized by Democrats Abroad.[315][319] | ||
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In Ireland, a protest under "No Kings" was hosted outside of the US embassy in Dublin.[320] | ||
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In Japan a protest occurred in Shibuya, Tokyo. The protest included both local Japanese and American expats, and was dubbed "No Crowns! No Kings!" Unlike protests in other countries with monarchies, protestors in Japan used references to kings in its slogans. The protest was organized by Democrats Abroad.[321][322][323] | ||
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In the Netherlands,[324][325] a protest occurred in Amsterdam outside the United States consulate. The protest was named No Tyrants to avoid the appearance of anti-monarchism.[326] | ||
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In Norway, a protest called No Dictators was held in Oslo.[327][328] | ||
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There were also demonstrations in then United Kingdom. In England, a protest in London took place under the banner of "No Tyrants" to avoid any potential confusion with anti-monarchists.[329][315] In Scotland, a protest outside of the U.S' consulate took place in Edinburgh under the banner of "No Kings" and "No Tyrants".[citation needed] | ![]() | |
Needs Expanding | Demonstrations also occurred in Colombia,[315] Costa Rica,[330] Malawi,[315] Mexico,[331] and South Africa.[310] |
Notable Events
[edit]Prior to June 14
[edit]On June 12,[332] Sheriff Wayne Ivey of Brevard County, Florida, said the Brevard Country Sheriff's department would use attack dogs and deadly force against protesters they deem violent.[332][333][334]
Governor Abbott deployed approximately 5,000 Texas National Guard troops and 2,000 state police across the state in preparation.[258]
San Francisco
[edit]In San Francisco, at least four “No Kings” protesters were struck by a motorist who then fled the scene.[335]
Culpeper County
[edit]A man drove into a crowd in Culpeper County.[336]
Salt Lake City
[edit]In the evening, at least 10,000 people gathered in Salt Lake City's Pioneer Park for a rally followed by a march through downtown. One protestor shot during the march later died from his injuries.[337][338][339][340]
Notes
[edit]- ^ According to The Guardian, "[i]nterest in the events has risen since Trump sent national guard and US Marine Corps troops to Los Angeles to tamp down mostly peaceful protests against ramped-up deportations".[8]
References
[edit]- ^ Baumann, Lisa (June 13, 2025). "What to know about 'No Kings' protests against Trump's policies – 50501". PBS News Hour. Associated Press. Archived from the original on June 13, 2025. Retrieved June 14, 2025.
- ^ Lee, Chantelle (June 10, 2025). "'No Kings Day' Protests Planned Across U.S. Amid L.A. Battle". Time. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Moran, Frank Witsil and Darcie. "As military groups prepare for weekend celebrations, No Kings activists organize protests". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ "What to expect at Trump's military parade and 'No Kings' protests". BBC. June 12, 2025. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Ewing, Giselle Ruhiyyih (June 14, 2025). "The Resistance 2.0 arrives with nationwide 'No Kings' protests". Politico. Retrieved June 15, 2025.
As President Donald Trump's military parade rolled through the nation's capital on Saturday, millions of Americans across the country took part in the largest coordinated protests against the president since the start of his second administration.
- ^ "Anti-Trump demonstrators crowd streets, parks and plazas across the US. Organizers say millions came". AP News. June 14, 2025. Retrieved June 14, 2025.
- ^ Falconer, April Rubin,Rebecca (June 15, 2025). ""No Kings" anti-Trump protests attract millions, organizers say". Axios.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Millions in US expected to protest against Trump in 'No Kings' demonstrations". The Guardian. June 13, 2025. Retrieved June 13, 2025.
- ^ a b "What to know about 'No Kings' protests against Trump's policies on Saturday". AP News. June 12, 2025. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ "What to expect at Trump's military parade and 'No Kings' protests". BBC News. June 12, 2025. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Archie, Ayana (June 14, 2025). "'No Kings' protests against Trump planned nationwide to coincide with military parade". NPR. Retrieved June 14, 2025.
- ^ Ewing, Giselle Ruhiyyih (June 14, 2025). "The Resistance 2.0 arrives with nationwide 'No Kings' protests". Politico. Retrieved June 14, 2025.
- ^ a b "Join a No Tyrants Protest Near You". Democrats Abroad. Retrieved June 13, 2025.
- ^ Green, Erica L.; Haberman, Maggie (June 10, 2025). "Trump Says Protesters at Military Parade Will Be Met With 'Very Big Force'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Dec, Stacey. "Trump warns 'any' protesters at military parade will be 'met with heavy force'". ABC News. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Goodman, Amy; Shaikh, Nermeen (June 11, 2025). ""No Kings": 1,800+ Rallies Planned as Trump Threatens "Very Heavy Force" on Army Parade Protesters". Democracy Now!. Retrieved June 13, 2025.
- ^ John Sharp, Mobile 'No Kings' protest draws largest crowd yet for anti-Trump movement, AL.com (June 14, 2025).
- ^ Spears, Aubrey (June 11, 2025). "NO KINGS protest organizers say they have received threats ahead of upcoming Mobile rally". WPMI. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ "Alabama activists unite to challenge Trump's parade, immigration policies". WZDX. June 14, 2025.
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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"I don't want to hear any whining later saying, 'We didn't know,'" warned Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey before nationwide protests begin on Saturday, June 14
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