Trump, No Kings and protests
Digest more
A stark contrast emerged in attendance between the Trump administration’s Army birthday parade in Washington, DC, and the sweeping “No Kings” protests held nationwide.
The militaristic extravaganza Trump envisoned for his birthday was no match for the millions that protested his policies nationwide
A 33-mile trip from one protest in Annapolis, Md., to the parade grandstand in front of the White House was like a journey between two different countries.
The U.S. Army celebrated its 250th anniversary on Saturday with a massive military parade in Washington, D.C., against a backdrop of political division and protests savaging President Trump.
Thousands of anti-Trump protests are taking place across the United States today, deemed "No Kings" day in response to the administration’s policies.
The American Civil Liberties Union, a part of the coalition said in a June 14 statement that more than five million people participated in over 2,100 rallies and protests, Fox News reported. The same number was mentioned by other groups that had put together the protest.
As a military parade rolls through Washington, DC, on Saturday – President Donald Trump’s birthday – millions of Americans are expected to protest in what organizers predict will be the strongest display of opposition to Trump’s administration since he took office in January.
The "No Kings" protest and march happening in Philadelphia on Saturday coincides with hundreds of rallies scheduled to take place across the country.
McCormick was one of the thousands of people who participated in a “No Kings” protest at Old College Hall in Newark on June 14 to make a difference.
A week after protests in Los Angeles brought nationwide attention to Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids taking place across the Southland, a nationwide "No Kings" demonstration challenging executive overreach is expected to bring thousands of people to the streets on Saturday.
Over 1,000 Queens residents marched through Forest Hills rejecting the idea of executive overreach and declaring that Trump “is no king.”
Across the country on Saturday, millions gathered at ‘No Kings,’ protests, as demonstrators said they believe President Donald Trump has overextended his power. Several of those protests took place in Roanoke,